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IAF-01-Q.1.09 COROT System Requirements for Accurate Stellar Photometry L. BOISNARD 1 M. AUVERGNE 2 1 2 CENTRE NATIONAL D’ETUDES SPATIALES – Toulouse – France OBSERVATOIRE DE PARIS-MEUDON – Meudon – France 52nd International Astronautical Congress 1-5 Oct 2001/Toulouse, France For permission to copy or republish, contact the International Astronautical Federation 3-5 Rue Mario-Nikis, 75015 Paris, France IAF-01-Q.1.09 COROT SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS FOR ACCURATE STELLAR PHOTOMETRY L. BOISNARD, COROT System Engineer CNES Toulouse, France [email protected] M. AUVERGNE, COROT Project Scientist CNRS Meudon, France [email protected] 1.1.1. Abstract The COROT satellite, which will be launched late 2004, is dedicated to stellar seismology and search for extra-solar planets. The mission is led by CNES in association with French laboratories and several European countries, contributing to the payload or to the ground segment. The spacecraft is based on a PROTEUS low earth orbit recurrent platform. Stellar seismology A star is a mass of hot gas, subject to forces of gravity, pressure and Coriolis inertia if it rotates. These forces play as the spring forces of an oscillator with quantified eigen modes. The hydrodynamic processes make the surface distort and are the source of photon flux oscillations, whose amplitude is expected about a few 10-6 (ppm). The experiment is designed for high accuracy relative stellar photometry, with long continuous observing runs. To discriminate its oscillation modes with a frequency resolution of 0.1Hz, each main target for seismology will be observed during 150 days. A total of 100 stars (magnitude less than 9) will be studied during the 2.5 years mission lifetime. Central program Focused on internal hydrodynamic processes, the COROT seismology central program will measure a few 10-6 variations of the luminous flux emitted by 5 main bright stars with a resolution better than 0.1 Hz in the Fourier space. This frequency resolution is necessary to discriminate a significant number of modes, to reveal the frequency splittings and to rebuild the line profiles. As second objective, COROT will detect the presence of extra-solar planets if they pass between the satellite and their parent star. 60000 stars (magnitude less than 15.5) will be monitored. Between 10 and 40 telluric planets should be detected in the "habitable zone" (temperature between 200 and 600 K). The paper recalls the mission and intends to explain where the critical scientific requirements are for payload design, on-board treatments and system engineering. Seismology measurements will be performed in the following scientific bandwidth : [0.1 ;10] mHz, covering both pressure modes of stars of spectral types F and G (higher frequencies) and gravity modes of stars of spectral type A (lower frequencies). For stochastically excited modes, the resolution is a function of the observation window length, the oscillating mode lifetime and the signal to noise ratio. Expecting mode lifetimes about 5 days, the target stars must be observed during 150 days with a minimum signal to noise ratio of 15 (in terms of power spectral density). 1. THE COROT MISSION 1.1. COROT scientific objectives The main target stars are typically F, G or Scuti (A) stars with a magnitude less than 6.5. In the vicinity of a main target, some additional stars, brighter than a magnitude 9 and belonging to an extended range of stellar types ( Dor, Ceph, peculiar metallic stars…), will also be studied. COROT is designed to acquire up to 10 stars simultaneously. The COROT mission has 2 scientific programs, both requiring long uninterrupted observations with very high photometric accuracy. They work simultaneously on adjacent regions of the sky. Copyright © 2001 by CNES and ALCATEL SPACE INDUSTRIES. Published by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc., with permission. Released to IAF/IAA/AIAA to publish in all forms. 1 the rotation speed from the center to the surface of the star. As illustrated for the pressure modes of the Sun (see Figures 1 and 2) : The large separation Exploratory program The purpose of this program is to observe a wide variety of stars (from B to K spectral types) up to magnitude 9, where the Hertzsprung & Russel diagram is scanned. n,l n1,l is connected to the sound speed (i.e the density) across the region of the stationary pressure modes. The small separation This will be accomplished by inserting a 20 days observation between two observations of the central program. With this shorter time window, the accuracy on the frequencies falls to 0.6 Hz, but it is sufficient to produce statistical data about the excitation of the oscillating modes, as a function of mass, age, rotation speed and metallicity. Fifty stars should be observed in five exploratory programs. n,l n1,l 2 is connected to the chemical composition near the stellar core. The second order differences 2 n1,l 2 n,l n1,l give constraints on the convective zone of the star. A total of 100 stars (magnitude less than 9) will be studied during the 2.5 years mission lifetime, half of them in the central program. 1.1.2. Search for extra-solar planets As second objective, COROT will be able to detect the presence of extra-solar planets when they transit. The detectors are 4 CCD 2048x2048 pixels with a field of view of 8°2. Half is dedicated to the extra-solar planets program. By adapting both the integration time and the focus conditions, but without any change in the mission sizing, luminous flux variations down to 7.10-4 (ground integration time : 1 hour) can be seen on a large variety of stars whose magnitude is comprised between 12 and 15.5. That is compatible with an eclipse detection for a planet slightly bigger than the Earth. For less bright stars (magnitude 15.5 and over), only giant gaseous planets will be detected. Examples of parameters to be measured DF/F (ppm) p 0 -50 -100 t (hr) -10 -5 0 5 10 Figure 3 : Principle of detection of a planet transit The flux decrease is given by : F / F (Rp / Rs )2 where Rp is the radius of the planet and Rs the radius of the parent star. If the impact parameter p is equal to 0, the transit duration is : tr (P / )(R s / a) where P is the orbit period for the planet and a its orbit radius (orbit supposed to be circular). To detect a planet with a complete confidence, the phase must stay coherent over 3 observed periodic eclipses. Given the 150 days-long observations imposed by the seismology central program, this restricts the mission to planets with a period below 50 days. The seismology spectrum of a star reveals some important parameters of its internal structure : the radius of the core, the Helium content and the mass, the limits of the convective layers and the profile of 2 Considering that a transit is an achromatic event, the use of chromatic information is helpful to discriminate transits against stellar activity (very chromatic events). So, a 3 colors dispersion device is placed in front of the exoplanets CCD matrices and will enable, after analyzing the signal chromatic variations, to widen the detection domain to cases where the observation window is not long enough to show a periodicity. The total mass of the satellite (launch configuration) is close to 600 kg, with a payload made up of : In addition to hundreds of Jupiter-like planets, between 10 and 40 telluric planets should be detected in the "habitable zone" (temperature between 200 and 600 K), depending on hypotheses about accretion models and planets existence. 12000 target stars, in a field of view of 4 square degrees, will be simultaneously observed during a 150 days-long period. Five different fields of view, at least, will be acquired during the whole mission. an afocal telescope (270 mm entrance pupil) composed of 2 parabolic mirrors, with a cylindrical baffle to stop the Earth straylight and an obturator against Sun blinding in early attitude acquisition phase ; a wild-field camera composed of a dioptric objective (5 lenses) and a focal block equipped with 4 frame transfer CCD 2048x2048. A bi-prism is inserted in front of the two CCD matrices dedicated to exoplanets ; an equipment bay supporting scientific data processing electronics (camera controls, extraction units and data processing units) and instrument housekeeping electronics (power distribution, fine thermal control, calibration sources management, synchronization unit). 1.2. The COROT satellite The main characteristics and performances of the spacecraft are summarized hereafter : The COROT spacecraft is based on a PROTEUS low earth orbit recurrent platform, developed by CNES and Alcatel Space Industries. Mass Bus dry mass = 270 kg Propellant mass = 30 kg Payload mass estimated at 300 kg Length 4.20 m Diameter 2.00 m Power Bus consumption = 300 W Payload consumption class = 200 W Electrical power generated by 2 symmetric wing arrays NiCd battery (TBC) AOCS Gyro-stellar unit with 2 star trackers and 3 2-axis gyrometers Magnetometers and sun sensors for attitude acquisition phase 4 reaction wheels, desaturated by magneto torquer bars 4 1N thrusters for orbit maneuvers 120 m/s (hydrazine) V capacity Pointing 0.05° (3) on each axis Improved to 0.5 arcsec with payload ecartometric data On board Derived from a GPS receiver Time Compatible with 10-6 accuracy Data handling Centralized architecture 2 MA 31750 Processors Communication links via MIL-STD-1553 bus and discrete point to point lines Data storage 2 Gbits (Mass memory ) Satellite-toS band QPSK Ground CCSDS packet standard protocol Interface Down Link TM frames data rate = 727 kbits/s TM packets data rate = 550 kbits/s Up Link TC frames data rate = 4 kbits/s Lifetime At least 3 years Unavailability 0.88% XS Baffle Telescope Star Trackers Camera Focal Block Radiator Equipment Bay ZS PROTEUS Platform YS Figure 4 : COROT satellite overview (represented with the satellite reference frame) 3 The platform will be used for the first time by the French-US oceanography JASON satellite, to be launched late 2001. Straylight from the Earth : the line of sight must remain at more than =20° from the Earth limb, i.e. the observations are possible when centered in a direction at less than = arccos(R/a) - from the perpendicular to the orbit plane. The radius of the observation cone is fixed at = 10° (see Figure 6). Roll domain : 20° on the boresight axis, after alignment of the solar arrays for the optimum of power budget. Such a rotation is helpful to optimize the projection of the target stars onto the CCD matrices (to get targets out from smearing columns, for instance) XS Data Handling Unit ZS Battery YS Gyro electronics Figure 5 : PROTEUS platform overview The satellite will be operated from the COROT Control Center, located in Toulouse and sharing the facilities of the PROTEUS satellites family. The preparation of the observation sequences and the pre-processing of the scientific data will be done by the COROT Mission Center, located in Toulouse and having interfaces with the laboratories. A dedicated automatic S band ground station will be used for communication with the satellite. Located at Villafranca (Spain), it will offer 4 visibilities per day. The mean volume of data to be transmitted daily to the ground is limited to 900 Mbits. Figure 6 : Orientation of the satellite Platform thermal constraints : with respect to the PROTEUS normal flight conditions, the satellite Zs- sidewall (battery) cannot be exposed to high solar fluxes for a long time. The battery thermal heat distributor will be adapted to withstand 190 W/m2, which is compatible with a solar incidence higher than 30°. A rotation on the boresight axis (Xs) before or after 5 months will fit the central and exploratory programs observation windows. Payload thermal constraints : because of the focal block radiator, the Ys+ satellite wall must be in the shade as much as possible. Ys+ will be exposed to the Sun only when the Earth is close to the Line of Equinoxes (low solar declination, high solar azimuth in the radiator reference frame). 1.3. System constraints and mission schedule The line of sight of COROT is assigned to keep a same direction during each period of 5 months, with a 90% duty cycle requirement (no occultation by the Earth). As a result, COROT has an inertial polar circular orbit, at an altitude between 800 and 900 km. The lower limit is fixed by the terrestrial straylight and the upper one by the size of the South Atlantic Anomaly and the maximum flux of protons acceptable by the instrument. 826 km is preferred for phase properties (orbit cycle over 7 days). Put together, these constraints lead to only one possible mission schedule, with four rotation maneuvers per year, separating the different programs as described on Figure 7. The orbit parameters are resumed hereafter : Semi-major axis Eccentricity Inclination Right Ascension of the Ascending Node 7178 < a < 7278 a = 7203 preferred e = 0.01° i = 90° = 12.5° Boresight at 6h50 12h The right ascension of the ascending node fixes the direction of the orbit plane, therefore the mean direction of the observation cone. It has been chosen to look at a dense region of the sky where the galactic plane intersects the equatorial plane (see Figure 8). The constraints to be taken into account for the orientation of the spacecraft are : Sun glare : the observations are possible when the Sun is at more than 90° of the observed field 4 2. PERFORMANCES AND DESIGN 2.1. Photometric requirements 2.1.1. Seismology program The accuracy () one can get from a line frequency measured in the Fourier space is given by : ( )2 /( 4Tobs ) 1 1 3 where is the mode width, Tobs the duration of the observation and -1 the signal to noise ratio in terms of power spectral density. To reach 0.1 Hz, a good compromise is to observe during 150 days and to have -1 at least equal to 15. Random noise Over a 5-day period (expected modes lifetime), it leads to the following photometric performance : FT(s) Figure 7 : Mission schedule and attitude maneuvers FT(p) The optimized value =12.5° has been defined by the COROT scientific committee on the basis of a set of preparatory observations. The main characteristics of the observation fields (radius = 10°), centered at 6 h 50 and 18 h 50, are the following : where : 11 main target stars meeting the criteria of magnitude and spectral type for the central program, including 1 star of solar type (same mass and age) and 2 Scuti candidates. It has been verified that these stars are not polluted by faint stars at less than 60 arcsec ; 813 stars as secondary targets, brighter than a magnitude 8 (excluding the giant ones). Photometric and spectroscopic ground based observations are in progress ; for the exoplanets program, the density of red dwarfs is higher than 1500 per square degree (magnitude less than 15.5) in most of the field. nrT 2 1 nT 4 FT(p) nT 1 6.10 7 nT FT(s) is the Fourier Transform of a stellar oscillation to be measured FT(p) the Fourier Transform of the photon noise n is the mean flux measured by the detector r=5.10-6 is the expected relative 0-peak oscillation of a F, G star. The photon noise level is fixed at 0.6 ppm and determines the efficiency of the instrument round the magnitude 6 : n=6.106 electrons/s. The standard deviation of the photon noise is about 2500 electrons/s. Note : for a A type star, with greater oscillations, a photon noise at 2.5 ppm is sufficient. The objective is to keep every other source of random noise below 1/10 of this reference noise. The main performances required are given in the next table : Straylight Jitter noise CCD readout and electronics noise Thermal sources CCD thermal variations CCD efficiency sensitivity Video electronics thermal variations Video electronics gain sensitivity Figure 8 : The sky observed by COROT The field of view is 2.7° x 3.05°, half for seismology and half for exoplanets. The relative position (left/right) has been defined as the same time as the orbit plane, leading to a compromise between the two programs to set each half-field in the most favorable orientation inside the mission sky zone. 5 < 15 photons/pixel/s Including the unavoidable zodiacal component < 0,5 arcsec If the non uniformity of the detectors is better than 1% < 14 electrons rms/pixel/s < 0.015° C peak-peak < 5 10-3 /° C < 0.5° C peak-peak < 0.15 10-3 /° C The point spread function (PSF) of a magnitude 6 star stretches over 350 pixels. The elementary integration time is 1 second. 2.2. Critical elements for payload and satellite design For each source of noise identified above, the design solution is quickly described. Structured noise and periodic perturbations Seismology will be performed in the scientific bandwidth : [0.1 ;10] mHz. Every structured noise having spectral lines between 1 minute and 3 hours is likely to be misinterpreted as a component of the star signal. The orbit period and its first harmonics are in that band. So, the instrument and the mission are thought to search out these perturbations, whose level must be reduced by design or corrected after calibration. When increasing, a perturbation becomes considered as unavailability and every interruption in the data makes the signal to noise decrease and the spectrum affected by windowing. The mission scenario must guarantee continuous observations with a duty cycle higher than 90%. 2.2.1. Straylight and telescope With a circular orbit at 826 km, the main difficulty is to trap the straylight coming from the Earth. At 20° from the limb, the collected flux is around 10 20 photons/s. To reach a residual flux of 1 photon/pixel/s at focal plane level, the instrument shall have a 10 -13 attenuation coefficient. A Three Mirror-Anastigmatic (TMA) solution being excluded for insufficient straylight rejection capacity, a 2 co-focal parabolic mirrors telescope has been the concept adopted. MIRROR M1 0°8 Periodic perturbations, mainly instrument thermal fluctuations, must be reduced to very low levels, compatible after correction with a spectral line below 2 ppm. Entrance Pupil Field Diam. 4° Line of sight Xs At instrument level, to avoid heavy implementation of an active regulation system, every source of periodic noise shall be kept at 50 ppm. The sensitive equipment will be characterized before the launch and a set of temperature probes will be mounted on the payload for subsequent light curve corrections. 0°8 MIRROR M2 3°2 Exit Pupil 3°6 Ys Dioptric Objective Focal Block Figure 9 : Telescope concept For example, the instrument is designed to have a CCD temperature peak stability about 0.015° associated with a knowledge of the temperature curve itself better than 0.005°. The knowledge of every thermal stability coefficient (CCD efficiency, electronics gains, offsets) is estimated at 1%. The focal plane of the two mirrors is shared by the entrance and exit pupils, and by a square field stop. The elliptical entrance pupil of equivalent diameter 270 mm is reduced by a factor 3. A dioptric camera with 5 lens is placed in the collimated exit beam. The focal length is 1.2 m. The pupil surface peak stability is required below 3.10-6 and the PSF diameter peak stability at 0.2 pixel over the orbital period. The straylight rejection coefficient, the highest to have been required from a space telescope of this class, associated with the weight and volume allocations of the mission, needs a high-performance compact baffle to be achieved. Its main characteristics are the following : 2.1.2. Extra-solar planets program The requirement to detect a change of stellar flux equal to 7.10-4 for a 15.5 magnitude star is fulfilled if the global random noise is twice the photon noise. Given the seismology program requirements and the typical image parameters for the exoplanets channel : elementary integration time : 32, PSF over 25 pixels for a reference K0 star, Length Entrance diameter Contamination level Internal design Mirror roughness optical transmission of the prism : 0.9, the random noise budget is 1.8 times the photon noise. Concerning the periodic perturbations, because of the windowing of the CCD (see chapter 3), the exoplanets program asks for an additional requirement of optical distortion stability : 0.05% over the orbital period. Coating 6 2700 mm (2 stages) 800 mm 2000 ppm in orbit Low diffraction chicanes against grazing incidence reflections < 1 nm (to prevent third diffusion occurrence) Low albedo (<4%) black paint 2.2.2. Pointing and AOCS 2.2.3. Focal block and images A movement of the PSF on the CCD surface changes the integrated photometry because the set of impacted detectors is not the same. To comply with a coupled attitude/photometry jitter noise 10 times lower than the photon noise, the satellite pointing stability requirement is stringent : 0.5 arcsec rms and needs to use the instrument for ecartometry. The focal plane is equipped with 4 EEV 4280 frame transfer CCD of 2048x2048 pixels, working in a Multi Pinned Phase (MPP) mode. This mode, associated with a temperature regulated at –40°C, reduces the dark currents to very low levels. The corresponding noise should be less than 1 electron/pixel/s rms. The 13.5 m detectors are thinned, back illuminated, in order to have a high quantum efficiency (70% once integrated) in the bandwidth [370 nm ; 950 nm]. The images are 16 bits encoded. This technology of detectors is used by ground observatories, but has not flown yet. A dedicated space evaluation has been undertaken by CNES. As shown by the budget hereafter, the periodic and random noises due to the sensor are divided per 10 while thermo-elastic biases between star tracker and payload frames are removed. Perturbation f Thermo-elastic f0 Sensor errors f0 Gravity Gradient 2f0 Sensor random noise Eclipses (transitory) MTB commands Amplitude ( line of sight) PROTEUS COROT 1" 0" 6" 0,03" 0,08" 1" < 0.08" 5" 18" (could be reduced) The light dispersion is performed through the bi-prism inserted in front of the two exoplanets CCD. Dispersion is along the detector rows. Note : f0 is the orbital frequency The AOCS loop will be modified and a specific mission mode will be implemented in the PROTEUS on-board software. At least 2 target stars of the seismology program will be used by the ecartometric algorithm, to be performed at payload level (leastsquare method). To avoid angular periodic errors due to the focal length thermal variations, the focal length will be estimated in real time. Small gaps of perturbations should remain during eclipse entries/exits, Magneto Torquer Bars (MTB) activations and solar panels rotations. The control law of MTB will be adapted to keep these gaps acceptable at system level. Figure 10 : Focal block The limited CCD well capacity (in MPP mode) and the jitter noise determine the size of the Point Spread Function (PSF) for the seismology channel. For a solar type star at the magnitude 6, the defocalized spot will be 350 pixels large. Although two images per minute are enough for scientific data reduction, the ecartometric function asks the CCD to work at the higher rate of 1 image per second. The windowed readout is programmed by the camera control. The transition from the PROTEUS standard mode to the mission mode is performed in two steps : The first step uses the star tracker data for the attitude control loop, while the instrument data are processed in parallel in another attitude estimator. The size of the target stars windows is adapted to the thermo-elastic drift between the payload and the gyro-stellar unit reference frames over the useful segment of the orbit (star tracker's field of view not masked by the Earth). A comparison of both attitude estimators convergence is made on the ground, before switching to the instrument data in the AOCS loop. The exoplanets channel time exposure is 32 s. The spot size is about 60 pixels at the magnitude 13 for a K2 type star. For the faint stars of this field, the readout noise and the background are important contributors to the noise budget. The readout noise shall be limited to 5 electrons/pixel/s. Complete images are transmitted to the on-board extraction units in charge of soft windowing. It takes 22 s. The instrument data are used to drive the control loop, before a second transition to program a change in the acquisition windows of the CCD (size, binning). From then on the CCD sequencers of the seismology channels are in configuration to perform the scientific on-board treatments. 7 In order to correlate the photometric signal with external parameters like temperature or voltage, a series of calibrations will be done at different levels : CCD, camera, camera with readout electronics and complete photometric chain. a focal block radiator, having a radiative surface of 940 x 280 mm2 and oriented towards the instrument line of sight ; two heat distributor radiators, having a radiative surface of 400 x 100 mm2; a set of thermistors and heaters. A MLI system covers all the equipment bay, including every inner elementary component and Second Surface Mirror (SSM) sheets are used on the vertical sides and on the external face of the radiators. The thermal decoupling of the focal block with its radiator is guaranteed by a high temperature gradient (the radiator is at –60° C), filtering the orbital perturbations. In the same way, simulations (including eclipses and albedo echelon functions) have shown that the temperature curves of the electronic units are close to sine curves of a few 10 ppm, easy to correct in ground post-treatments, with non phase-coherent harmonics over 5 days (not likely to be confused with the scientific signal). Figure 11 : Examples of PSF for the seismology (left) and exoplanets (right) fields 2.2.4. Thermal regulation The thermal stability of the instrument will be carefully controlled in order not to introduce too high periodic fluctuations on the light curve induced by eclipses and orbital variations of terrestrial aspect. Fine Thermal Control Radiator The telescope thermal concept must provide a temperature stability in order not to exceed a variation of the star image bigger than 0.2 pixels on the orbital period (and 2 pixels on the long term). This has led to the choice of a carbon-cyanate material, associated with a thermal control range of 20° 4° C. A Multi Layer Insulation (MLI) system surrounds the telescope structure. Camera Control Housekeeping Electronics (analogical telemetry) Extraction Unit Heat distributor Housekeeping Electronics The instrument thermal heating is realized by 11 platform-provided heater lines : 7 dedicated to the telescope and 4 to the equipment bay. Additional lines are provided at instrument level for fine tuning of the focal plane and proximity electronics temperatures. Focal Block Radiator Data Processing Unit Converter Figure 12 : Passive thermal regulation of the equipment bay The focal plane is at –40° C. This temperature is driven by active thermal regulation, necessary to achieve the stringent requirement of stability at CCD level : 0.015° C. A thermal sensor is fixed under the Invar block. It must be noticed that extending the flight domain w.r.t. solar fluxes implies increasing the rejection capacity of the radiator, i.e. increasing its temperature (the equivalent outside temperature is about –80°C). Because of a lower decoupling efficiency with the focal block, the orbital periodic perturbations would get more important. Concerning the electronics for scientific data processing and payload housekeeping, the solution is a passive thermal regulation of the equipment bay, compatible with two on-board photometric chains working continuously (stable heat dissipation). The price is a significant increase in mass. 3. ON-BOARD TREATMENTS The total scientific telemetry volume is 900 Mbits per day, received by a dedicated S band antenna (Villafranca ground station). Complete images cannot be downloaded : photometry is integrated on-board within pre-defined masks. The equipment bay fine thermal regulation subsystem consists of (see Figure 12) : two aluminum heat distributors 15-30 mm thick, on which the camera control and housekeeping electronics cases are mounted ; an aluminum heat distributor 4 mm thick for less sensible cases (extraction units, for instance) ; 3.1. Seismology program The on-board photometric chains are designed to process, for each CCD : 5 star windows (50x50 pixels2) ; 8 5 sky reference windows (binned in columns) ; 2 offset reference windows. Figure 13 : Star and sky reference windows simulated around HD 43318 (image size : 15' x 15') The image of 2 stars among 5 can be downloaded in 25x25 masks, if accumulated during 32 s. PSF fitting being ruled out (time consuming), two aperture photometry methods are under evaluation : The "threshold" method : a threshold s is defined in such a way that the signal to noise ratio is maximum. The set of pixels with intensity larger than s define the aperture. As the mask is determined for each new image, this method has the advantage to be independent of the image motion inside the CCD window. But, it does not exclude the faint stars of the window, and if such a faint star lies on the window edges, it will go in and out with depointing, increasing the noise. The "mask" method : first an average image is acquired and a mask is built by the set of pixels determined as in the threshold method. Pixels belonging to another star inside the window are excluded from the set. This aperture will be the same for all images of a run. In this case the photometry is sensitive to large translations, which shift the spot outside the mask, but is not polluted by closeby faint stars as long as the two spot images are not in contact. Figure 14 : Smearing on-board correction Two stars of the seismology field are used for the ecartometry. The barycenter calculation is made using a threshold method. 3.2. Extra-solar planets program The exoplanets fields are characterized by a high density of objects up to the magnitude 23. The useful pixels represent only 10% of the CCD image. The on-board photometric chains are designed to process, for each CCD : 5000 stars within chromatic masks ; 1000 stars within monochromatic masks ; 9 small sky reference images (10x15 pixels 2) ; 2 offset reference windows. Both the methods will be implemented in the payload software. The threshold method will be preferred for isolated bright stars (magnitude less than 7). The on-board software also corrects the photometry from a series of undesirable components : offset variations, dark currents, flat-field (TBC), smearing due to detector frame transfer and false pixels when crossing the South Atlantic Anomaly (high probability of proton events). Figure 15 : Simulated exoplanets field up to mv=16.5 around HD 49434 (image diameter : 20') The masks have to be programmed among a predefined list of uploaded patterns. The monochromatic masks are used for faint and cold stars analyzed in 9 white-light, as well as for background photometric references. 36 stars can be oversampled to 32 s, in case a transit event is detected. Every other correction of the light curve will be done on the ground. The shape of the mask is a function of several parameters : the magnitude of the star ; the temperature of the star (or its color) ; the position on the CCD, because of the space variations of the PSF ; the contamination of the target by closeby stars. Conclusion The COROT experiment addresses major scientific topics. Designed to probe the internal structure of stars and bring a new understanding of the stellar evolution processes, it has been adapted to the search for extra-solar planets. The photometric detection of telluric planets is the next challenge after the discovery of Jupiter-like objects. Besides, the COROT stellar microvariability database, containing the light curves of 100 000 stars, will provide the astronomers community with wide research opportunities (stellar magnetism, binary systems…) It has been shown by simulation that 256 different patterns allow to fit every possible target. A system tool is under development to determine the optimal programming of an exoplanets observing run, taking into account the mask definition criteria, the behavior of the instrument (PSF variations, local noise or CCD defaults) and a number of effects such as spot overlapping and smearing. The project activity is currently focused on the instrument and system engineering. Straylight rejection, pointing, thermal stability and photometry on-board processing are the main critical points of the mission, for which cost-effective compromises have been found. The satellite Preliminary Design Review will be held in July 2002 while the instrument is already in development phase for a delivery of the flight model in 2004. The launch is scheduled late 2004, by a ROCKOT or SOYUZ launcher. Simulations of representative fields will be done before the launch, using the catalogues of targets obtained from space or ground based observations. The on-board software calculates the photometry in one or three colors, depending on the selected pattern, and accumulates the data during 32 cycles (17 minutes). The movements of the line of sight make the image spot move on the surface of the CCD and the dispersed colors blend together over the mask. To correct this depointing noise, the fluxes are real-time interpolated before accumulation by the onboard software. The attitude data come from the seismology channel. Project Team The mission is led by CNES and the following French laboratories : Observatoire de Paris-Meudon, involved in the development of the camera, the on-board software, the equipment bay and the ground data processing for seismology ; Laboratoire d'Astrophysique Spatiale (Marseille), in charge of the telescope and the ground data processing for exoplanets ; Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale (Orsay), in charge of the calibrations and the prism delivery ; Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (Toulouse), which conducts the important program of preparatory observations. The scientific committee, with members of the seven European partners, is led by Annie Baglin, PI. References R. Samadi, G. Houdek, M.-J. Goupil, Y. Lebreton, A. Baglin. Oscillation power across the HR diagram : sensitivity to the convection treatment. Eddington Workshop, 2001. ESA Special Publications series. Contact For more information and links towards other sites, one can contact the internet server : http://corot-mission.cnes.fr Figure 16 : Optimal mask at mv=14 as a function of the position (left) and the star temperature (right) 10 Acknowledgements This paper presents results of the work of the COROT project team, gathering people working in CNES as well as in the French laboratories. We want to give credit to their skill and their contribution. 11