Infrared Astronomy on the Midcourse Space Experiment

The Midcourse Space Experiment (MSX) is a multiple objective experiment scheduled to fly by the end of 1994. Infrared photometry and interferometry will be obtained by a solid hydrogen cooled, off-axis telescope of 35 cm unobscured primary aperture. The sensitivities of the line scanned arrays are comparable to IRAS bands 1 and 2 but the spatial resolution is some 30 times better. Nine broadly defined astronomy experiments are planned for the 18 month cryogen phase of the mission. Four of these experiments survey regions not adequately covered by previous infrared missions: the zodiacal cloud near the sun and the anti-solar direction, the Galactic Plane where IRAS sensitivities were limited by confusion and the gaps left by the IRAS survey. The higher sensitivity obtained from raster scans will probe Galactic structure and create intermediate spatial resolution maps of extended sources such as HII regions, the Magellanic Clouds and nearby galaxies. Measurements are also planned on a number of solar system objects such as planets, asteroids, the dust bands, comets and cometary debris trails. Moderate resolution spectra of a number of bright, discrete, extended sources will be obtained as well as low resolution spectral mapping along the Galactic Plane and Zodiacal dust cloud.