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Status of the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA)
Authors:RD Gehrz  EE Becklin  J de Buizer  T Herter  LD Keller  A Krabbe  PM Marcum  TL Roellig  GHL Sandell  P Temi  WD Vacca  ET Young  H Zinnecker
Institution:1. Department of Astronomy, School of Physics and Astronomy, 116 Church Street, S. E., University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA;2. Universities Space Research Association, NASA Ames Research Center, MS 211-3, Moffett Field, CA 94035, USA;3. Astronomy Department, 202 Space Sciences Building, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-6801, USA;4. Department of Physics, Ithaca College, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA;5. Deutsches SOFIA Institut, Universität Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 31, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany;6. NASA Ames Research Center, MS 245-6, Moffett Field, CA 94035, USA;g SOFIA Science Center, NASA Ames Research Center, MS N211-3, Moffett Field, CA 94035, USA
Abstract:The Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), a joint US/German project, is a 2.5-m infrared airborne telescope carried by a Boeing 747-SP that flies in the stratosphere at altitudes as high as 45,000 ft (13.72 km). This facility is capable of observing from 0.3 μm to 1.6 mm with an average transmission greater than 80% averaged over all wavelengths. SOFIA will be staged out of the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center aircraft operations facility at Palmdale, CA. The SOFIA Science Mission Operations (SMO) will be located at NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA. First science flights began in 2010 and a full operations schedule of up to one hundred 8 to 10 hour-long flights per year will be reached by 2014. The observatory is expected to operate until the mid-2030s. SOFIA’s initial complement of seven focal plane instruments includes broadband imagers, moderate-resolution spectrographs that will resolve broad features due to dust and large molecules, and high-resolution spectrometers capable of studying the kinematics of atomic and molecular gas at sub-km/s resolution. We describe the SOFIA facility and outline the opportunities for observations by the general scientific community and for future instrumentation development. The operational characteristics of the SOFIA first-generation instruments are summarized. The status of the flight test program is discussed and we show First Light images obtained at wavelengths from 5.4 to 37 μm with the FORCAST imaging camera. Additional information about SOFIA is available at http://www.sofia.usra.edu and http://www.sofia.usra.edu/Science/docs/SofiaScienceVision051809-1.pdf.
Keywords:Infrared Astronomy  Sub-millimeter astronomy  Airborne astronomy  Infrared spectroscopy  Spectroscopy  SOFIA
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