CMS Survey Space Telescope with ZHAN Hu (NAOC/PKU) | On Things to Come

 On Things to Come Webinar

CMS Survey Space Telescope
 
China Space Station Telescope, CSST 
  

Speaker: ZHAN Hu (NAOC/PKU, China)
 
Wednesday, 7 July 2021 
4 pm GMT+8


Watch it live on BigMarker
 
or
Watch it live on Bilibili here!
 

 

 

 

The 2m-aperture Survey Space Telescope (also known as the China Space Station Telescope, CSST) is a major science project of the China Manned Space Program. It is expected to start science operations around 2024 and has a nominal mission lifetime of 10 years. During observations, CSST will fly independently in the same orbit as the space station while maintaining a large distance apart. It can dock with the space station for servicing as scheduled or as needed. With a Cook-type three-mirror anastigmat design, CSST can achieve superior image quality within a large field of view (FoV), which gives it an advantage for survey observations. The radius encircling 80% energy of its point spread function within the central 1.1 square degrees of FoV is required to be no more than 0.15”, including all wavefront errors in the optics and instruments and dynamical effects such as the telescope’s attitude control and vibration. CSST will be launched with 5 first-generation instruments including a Survey Camera, a Terahertz Receiver, a Multichannel Imager, an Integral Field Spectrograph, and a Cool Planet Imaging Coronagraph. The primary task of CSST is to carry out a high-resolution large-area multiband imaging and slitless spectroscopy survey covering the wavelength range of 255 nm to 1000 nm. It will take the Survey Camera roughly 7 years of operation accumulated over 10 years of orbital time to image roughly 17,500 square degrees of the sky in NUV, u, g, r, i, z, and y bands and take slitless spectroscopy of the same sky in 3 bands. The point-source 5 limiting magnitudes in g and r bands can reach 26 (AB mag) or higher. The spectral resolution (R= / ) of the slitless spectrograph is specified to be on average no less than 200, and the wide-band-equivalent limiting magnitudes in GV (400-620 nm) and GI (620-1000 nm) bands will reach 23 or higher. Deep fields will be selected for more observations to reach at least one magnitude deeper than the wide-area survey. I will give an update on the project and discuss its capabilities and survey performance.


About ZHAN Hu
 
Dr. Hu Zhan is the Project Scientist of CSST and the chief designer of the CSST Survey Camera. His research areas include cosmology, camera technology, calibration methods, and detector effects. After obtaining his Ph.D. from the University of Arizona in 2004, he worked at the University of California at Davis first as a postdoctoral researcher and then assistant project physicist, working on the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (later renamed Vera Rubin Observatory). He moved to the National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2009 and has been there since then. He is also an adjunct professor at the Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University.
 
 
Schedule

23 September 2020
4 pm (GMT+8)
Geraint Jones – ESA Comet Interceptor Mission [YouTube/Youku]
21 October 2020 
8 pm (GMT+8)
Ralph Lorenz – NASA Dragonfly Mission [YouTube/Youku]
4 November 2020
4 pm (GMT+8)
Wang Chi – ESA SMILE Mission [YouTube/Youku]
25 November 2020
4 pm (GMT+8)
Heike Rauer – ESA PLATO Mission [YouTube/Youku]
9 December 2020
4 pm (GMT+8)
Takehiko Satoh – JAXA Akatsuki Mission [YouTube/Bilibili]
18 December 2020
4 pm (GMT+8)
Olivier Witasse – ESA JUICE Mission [YouTube/Bilibili]
21 December 2020
4 pm (GMT+8)
Tomohiro Usui – JAXA MMX Mission [YouTube/Bilibili]
13 January 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Weiqun Gan – CAS ASO-S Mission [YouTube/Bilibili] 
27 January 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Giovanna Tinetti – ESA Ariel Mission [YouTube/Bilibili] 
24 February 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Johannes Benkhoff – ESA BepiColombo Mission I [YouTube/Bilibili] 
10 March 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Gabriele Cremonese – ESA BepiColombo Mission II  [YouTube/Bilibili] 
24 March 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Go Murakami – ESA BepiColombo Mission III [YouTube/Bilibili] 
7 April 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Yoshifumi Saito – ESA BepiColombo Mission IV [YouTube/Bilibili] 
14 April 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Daniel Mueller – ESA Solar Orbiter Mission I [YouTube/Bilibili] 
21 April 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Stefano Vitale – ESA LISA Mission [YouTube/Bilibili] 
6 May 2021
9 am (GMT+8)
Andy Cheng – NASA DART Mission [YouTube/Bilibili] 
12 May 2021
9 am (GMT+8)
Robert Pappalardo – NASA Europa Clipper [YouTube/Bilibili] 
19 May 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Saem Krucker – ESA Solar Orbiter Mission II Watch
25 May 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Sami Solanki – ESA Solar Orbiter Mission III Watch
2 June 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Athena Coustenis – ESA's ExoMars Missions Watch
9 June 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Yuan Weimin – CAS Einstein Probe Mission Attend
16 June 2021
10 am (GMT+8)
Evgenya Shkolnik – NASA SPARCS Mission Attend
30 June 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Ren Laurelijs – ESA EUCLID Mission 
7 July 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
ZHAN Hu – CMS Chinese Space Station Telescope
14 July 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Tomoko Arai – JAXA DESTINY+ Mission
21 July 2021
4 pm (GMT+8)
Micheal K ppers – ESA HERA Mission
25 August 2021
4 pm (GMT+8) 
HE Huaiyu – CAS Chang'e 5 Mission
1 September 2021
4 pm (GMT+8) 
ZHANG Shuangnan – CAS HXMT Mission
9 Sept. 2021
10 am (GMT+8)
Lindy Elkins-Tanton – NASA Psyche Mission
15 Sept. 2021
4 pm (GMT+8) 
LIN Honglei – CAS Tianwen-1 
22 Sept. 2021
9 am (GMT+8)
Hal Levison – NASA Lucy Mission
29 Sept. 2021
9 am (GMT+8)
Ralph McNutt – NASA Interstellar Probe

 
 
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