The Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment Mission Overview

Open Access
Authors
  • L. Fossati
  • T.T. Koskinen
  • N. Nell
  • P. Petit
  • A.A. Vidotto
  • M. Beasley
  • N. DeCicco
  • A.G. Sreejith
  • A. Suresh
  • J. Baumert
  • P.W. Cauley
  • C.V. D'Angelo
  • K. Hoadley
  • R. Kane
  • R. Kohnert
  • J. Lambert
  • S. Ulrich
Publication date 01-02-2023
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 63
Volume | Issue number 165 | 2
Number of pages 9
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Atmospheric escape is a fundamental process that affects the structure, composition, and evolution of many planets. The signatures of escape are detectable on close-in, gaseous exoplanets orbiting bright stars, owing to the high levels of extreme-ultraviolet irradiation from their parent stars. The Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment (CUTE) is a CubeSat mission designed to take advantage of the near-ultraviolet stellar brightness distribution to conduct a survey of the extended atmospheres of nearby close-in planets. The CUTE payload is a magnifying near-ultraviolet (2479-3306 Å) spectrograph fed by a rectangular Cassegrain telescope (206 mm $ 84 mm); the spectrogram is recorded on a back-illuminated, UV-enhanced CCD. The science payload is integrated into a 6U Blue Canyon Technology XB1 bus. CUTE was launched into a polar, low-Earth orbit on 2021 September 27 and has been conducting this transit spectroscopy survey following an on-orbit commissioning period. This paper presents the mission motivation, development path, and demonstrates the potential for small satellites to conduct this type of science by presenting initial on-orbit science observations. The primary science mission is being conducted in 2022--2023, with a publicly available data archive coming online in 2023.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/aca8a2
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