Abstract
We report results of a recently-completed pre-formulation phase study of SPIRIT, a candidate NASA Origins Probe mission. SPIRIT is a spatial and spectral interferometer with an operating wavelength range 25-400 μm. SPIRIT will provide sub-arcsecond resolution images and spectra with resolution R = 3000 in a 1′ field of view to accomplish three primary scientific objectives: (1) learn how planetary systems form from protostellar disks, and how they acquire their inhomogeneous composition; (2) characterize the family of extrasolar planetary systems by imaging the structure in debris disks to understand how and where planets of different types form; and (3) learn how high-redshift galaxies formed and merged to form the present-day population of galaxies. Observations with SPIRIT will be complementary to those of the James Webb Space Telescope and the ground-based Atacama Large Millimeter Array. All three observatories could be operational contemporaneously. © 2007.
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Leisawitz, D., Baker, C., Barger, A., Benford, D., Blain, A., Boyle, R., … Wilson, M. (2007). The space infrared interferometric telescope (SPIRIT): High-resolution imaging and spectroscopy in the far-infrared. Advances in Space Research, 40(5), 689–703. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2007.05.081
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