Issue |
EAS Publications Series
Volume 34, 2009
Astronomy in the Submillimeter and Far Infrared Domains with the Herschel Space Observatory
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Page(s) | 3 - 20 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/eas:0934001 | |
Published online | 20 December 2008 |
L. Pagani and M. Gerin (eds)
EAS Publications Series, 34 (2009) 3-20
The Herschel-Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI)
1
SRON, National Institute for Space Research, Groningen, The Netherlands
2
Leiden Observatory, University of Leiden, The Netherlands
3
CESR, CNRS and Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France
4
Physics Department, CalTech, Pasadena, California, USA
5
KOSMA, University of Köln, Germany
6
NASA, Ames Research Centre, Mountain View, California, USA
7
Max-Planck-Institute für Radio Astronomie, Bonn, Germany
8
IEM-CSIC, Madrid, Spain
9
NASA, Jet Propulsion Laboratories, Pasadena, California, USA
10
Obs. de Yebes, Spain
11
IFSI, via del Fosso del Cavaliere, 00133 Roma, Italie
This paper describes the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI) to be launched onboard of ESA's Herschel Space Observatory, by 2008. The instrument is designed to be electronically tunable over a wide and continuous frequency range in the Far Infrared, with velocity resolutions better than 0.1 km s-1 and a high sensitivity. This will allow detailed investigations of a wide variety of astronomical sources, ranging from solar system objects, star formation regions to nuclei of galaxies. The instrument comprises 5 frequency bands covering 480–1150 GHz with SIS mixers and a sixth dual frequency band, for the 1410–1910 GHz range, with Hot Electron Bolometer Mixers (HEB). The Local Oscillator (LO) subsystem consists of a Ka-band synthesizer followed by 14 chains of frequency multipliers, 2 chains for each frequency band. A pair of Auto-Correlators and a pair of Acousto-Optic spectrometers process the two IF signals from the dual-polarization front-ends to provide instantaneous frequency coverage of 4 GHz, with a set of resolutions (140 kHz to 1 MHz), better than <0.1 km s-1. After a successful qualification program, the flight instrument entered the testing phase. We will also report on the first pre-flight test and calibration results together with the expected in-flight performance.
© EAS, EDP Sciences, 2009