The CHEOPS calibration bench

CHEOPS is an ESA Class S Mission aiming at the characterization of exoplanets through the precise measurement of their radius, using the transit method [1]. To achieve this goal, the payload is designed to be a high precision “absolute” photometer, looking at one star at a time. It will be able to cover la large fraction of the sky by repointing. Its launch is expected at the end of 2017 [2, this conference]. CHEOPS’ main science is the measure of the transit of exoplanets of radius ranging from 1 to 6 Earth radii orbiting bright stars. The required photometric stability to reach this goal is of 20 ppm in 6 hours for a 9th magnitude star. The CHEOPS’ only instrument is a Ritchey-Chretien style telescope with 300 mm effective aperture diameter, which provides a defocussed image of the target star on a single frame-transfer backside illuminated CCD detector cooled to -40°C and stabilized within ~10 mK [2]. CHEOPS being in a LEO, it is equipped with a high performance baffle. The spacecraft platform provides a pointing stability of < 2 arcsec rms. This relatively modest pointing performance makes high quality flat-fielding necessary In the rest of this article we will refer to the only CHEOPS instrument simply as “CHEOP” Its behavior will be calibrated thoroughly on the ground and only a small subset of the calibrations can be redone in flight. The main focuses of the calibrations are the photonic gain stability and sensibility to the environment variations and the Flat field that has to be known at a precision better than 0.1%.

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[2]  V. Viotto,et al.  CHEOPS: status summary of the instrument development , 2016, Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation.

[3]  David Ehrenreich,et al.  CHEOPS: a space telescope for ultra-high precision photometry of exoplanet transits , 2014, Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation.

[4]  Daniel R. Coulter,et al.  Techniques and Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets III , 2007 .

[5]  Bruno Chazelas,et al.  The CHEOPS instrument on-ground calibration system , 2015, SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications.

[6]  François Wildi,et al.  A white super-stable source for the metrology of astronomical photometers , 2015, SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications.

[7]  N. Rando,et al.  ESA CHEOPS mission: development status , 2016, Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation.

[8]  R. Ragazzoni,et al.  The CHEOPS (characterising exoplanet satellite) mission: telescope optical design, development status and main technical and programmatic challenges , 2017, International Conference on Space Optics.