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The MOST (Microvariability
and Oscillations of STars) astronomy mission under the Canadian
Space Agency's Small Payloads Program is Canada's first space
science microsatellite and Canada's first space telescope.
The
satellite's mission is to conduct long-duration stellar photometry
observations in space. The primary science objectives include:
measuring light intensity oscillations in solar type stars;
determining the age of nearby "metal-poor sub-dwarf"
stars, which in turn allows a lower limit to be set on the
age of the Universe; and detecting the first reflected light
from orbiting exoplanets and using it to determine the composition
of their atmospheres.
To make these measurements, MOST incorporates into a microsatellite
design a small (15 cm aperture), high-photometric-precision
optical telescope and a Dynacon high performance attitude
control system that is revolutionary in its pointing accuracy
for a microsatellite. MOST was successfully launched at 14:15
UTC 30 June 2003 on a "Rockot" launch vehicle from
Plesetsk, Russia. The satellite was commissioned during the
first few months after launch and is now in science operations
mode, exceeding performance predictions.
Scientific
Goals
Size
doesn't always matter. Stellar seismologists exploit extremely
tiny surface vibrations of stars, detected through brightness
oscillations with amplitudes of a few parts per million, to
probe stars' hidden interiors and ages and address big questions
such as "What is the age of the Universe?" A big
telescope is not needed to study many of the Sun's nearer
neighbours in the Galaxy, which are bright enough to provide
large photon fluxes and high signal-to-noise. However, atmospheric
turbulence plus the day/night cycles inherent to single-site
ground-based observing mean that a telescope must be in space.
Even there, a big budget is not necessary, if we take advantage
of proven optical and detector technology and recent advances
in microsatellite attitude control.
Until
recently, performing optical astronomy experiments from a
low-cost microsatellite (mass < 100 kg) was considered
unfeasible because of the poor pointing possible from a platform
with such small inertia (approx. ± 2°). In 1997,
anticipating new microsat attitude control technology being
developed by Dynacon Inc., a team of astronomers and aerospace
engineers first proposed to the Canadian Space Agency (CSA)
a project to obtain astronomical photometry of unprecedented
precision from a microsatellite. In the next year, MOST (Microvariablity
and Oscillations of STars / Microvariabilité et Oscillations
STellaire) was selected to be Canada's first science microsat,
as part of the CSA Small Payloads Program. Additional funding
was provided by the Ontario Research and Development Challenge
Fund, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Reseach Council
(NSERC), the Ontario Centre for Research in Earth and Space
Technology and the Universities of Toronto, British Columbia
and Vienna.
MOST
features a small optical telescope (aperture = 15 cm) equipped
with a CCD photometer designed to return unprecedented photometric
precision (ΔL / L ~ 10-6) and frequency resolution (Δν~ 0.1
µHz) on stars other than the Sun. Given the fact that
this instrument will be carried aboard a microsat bus about
the size and mass of a suitcase, the Canadian public has come
to know the MOST mission as the "Humble Space Telescope."
Probing
Mysterious Planets:
Following in Galileo's Footsteps
MOST
was originally designed to detect rapid brightness oscillations
in Sun-like stars, to seismically probe their interiors. However,
once the project had passed the critical design phase, it
was realised the MOST instrument was more sensitive and versatile
than originally expected in Phase A. It also had the potential
to detect reflected light from some of the giant planets recently
discovered to be orbiting other nearby stars. The amount of
light reflected and scattered back to Earth by such an exoplanet
would vary during the planet's orbit, as it goes through illumination
phases like those of the Moon or of Venus, as first observed
telescopically by Galileo in the early 1600's. Therefore,
in Phase C of the project, the MOST team added an exciting
new science application, without changing the hardware or
software design, or the selected orbit, and at no added cost.
The
amplitude and shape of the reflected light curve of an exoplanet
depends on the planet's size, its orbital inclination and
eccentricity, and most importantly, its atmospheric composition
(which determines its albedo). However, the exoplanet signal
is very subtle - about a part in 105 relative to the brightness
of its parent star - with orbital periods of a few days for
the exoplanets with the smallest orbits. Simulations by Green
et al. (2003) indicate that MOST should be able to detect
this signal for exoplanet systems like 51 Pegasi (the first
solar-type planetary system to be discovered) and tau Bootis.
MOST
would be the first instrument in history capable of detecting
these signals and giving direct information about the atmospheres
of these mysterious worlds. At the same time, data on the
oscillations of the parent stars would specify the ages of
these stellar/planetary systems - an important test of models
of how these planets formed and evolved.
Funding Partners
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