• 제목/요약/키워드: 적외선 우주배경 복사 관측 국제 공동 연구

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적외선 우주배경복사 관측 실험 국제 공동 연구 (INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION OF THE COSMIC INFRARED BACKGROUND EXPERIMENT)

  • 이대희;남욱원;이성호;진호;육인수;김건희;박수종
    • 천문학논총
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    • 제21권2호
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    • pp.21-26
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    • 2006
  • A Korean team (Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute, Korea Basic Science Institute, and Kyung Hee University) takes part in an international cooperation project called CIBER (Cosmic Infrared Background ExpeRiment), which has begun with Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in USA and Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS) in Japan. CIBER is a rocket-borne instrument, of which the scientific goal is to measure the cosmic near-infrared extra-galactic background to search for signatures of primordial galaxy formation. CIBER consists of a wide-field two-color camera, a low-resolution absolute spectrometer, and a high-resolution narrow-band imaging spectrometer. The Korean team is in charge of the ground support electronics and manufacturing of optical parts of the narrow-band spectrometer, which will provide excellent opportunities for science and technology to Korean infrared groups.

적외선 우주배경복사 관측 실험 2(CIBER2) 국제 공동 연구 (KOREAN PARTICIPATION ON THE COSMIC INFRARED BACKGROUND EXPERIMENT 2 (CIBER2))

  • 이대희;박원기;문봉곤;박성준;김민규;김건희;남욱원;표정현;정웅섭;박영식;김일중;한원용
    • 천문학논총
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    • 제30권1호
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    • pp.11-16
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    • 2015
  • First light galaxies have predictable linear clustering, and are expected to produce fluctuations with a characteristic spatial power spectrum, which peaks at an angular scale of ~ 10 arcminutes and in the $1-2{\mu}m$ spectral regions. The Cosmic Infrared Background ExpeRiment 2 (CIBER2) is a dedicated sounding rocket mission for measuring the fluctuations in the extragalactic infrared background light, following up the previous successful measurements of CIBER1. With a 28.5 cm telescope accompanied with three arms of camera barrels and a dual broadband filter on each H2RG (${\lambda}_c=2.5{\mu}m$) array, CIBER2 can measure 6 bands of wide field ($1.1{\times}2.2$ degrees) up to 3 AB magnitudes deeper than CIBER1. This project is leaded by California Institute of Technology/Jet Propulsion Laboratory, collaborating internationally with Institute of Space and Astronautical Science in Japan, Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute, Korea Basic Science Institute, and Seoul National University. The Korean team is in charge of 1) one H2RG scientific array, 2) ground station hardware and software, 3) telescope lenses, and 4) flight and test bed electronics fabrication. In this paper, we describe the detailed activities of the Korean participation as well as the current status of the CIBER2 project.