The 'Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Telescope' ('EIT') is an
instrument on the
SOHO spacecraft used to obtain high-resolution
images of the
solar corona in the
ultraviolet range. The EIT instrument is sensitive to
light of four different
wavelengths: 17.1, 19.5, 28.4, and 30.4
nm, corresponding to light produced by highly
ionized
iron (XI)/(X), (XII), (XV), and
helium (II), respectively. EIT is built as a single telescope with a quadrant structure to the entrance mirrors: each quadrant reflects a different color of EUV light, and the wavelength to be observed is selected by a shutter that blocks light from all but the desired quadrant of the main telescope.
The EIT wavelengths are of great interest to solar physicists because they are emitted by the very hot
solar corona but not by the relatively cooler
photosphere of the Sun; this reveals structures in the corona that would otherwise be obscured by the brightness of the Sun itself. EIT was originally conceived as a
viewfinder instrument to help select observing targets for the other instruments on board SOHO, but EIT is credited with a good fraction of the original science to come from SOHO, including the first observations of traveling wave phenomena in the corona, characterization of
coronal mass ejection onset, and determination of the structure of
coronal holes. It currently (2006) produces an Fe XII (19.5 nm wavelength) image of the Sun about four times an hour, around the clock; these are immediately uplinked as time-lapse movies to the
SOHO web site for immediate viewing by anyone who is interested. The images are used for long-duration studies of the Sun, for detailed structural analyses of solar features, and for real-time
space weather prediction by the
NOAA Space Environment Center.
Technology
EIT is the first long-duration instrument to use
normal incidence multilayer coated
optics to image the
Sun in
extreme ultraviolet. This portion of the spectrum is extremely difficult to reflect, as most
matter absorbs the light very strongly. Conventionally these wavelengths have been reflected either using
grazing incidence (as in a
Wolter telescope for imaging
X-rays) or a
diffraction grating (as in the infamous
overlappograph flown on
Skylab in the mid
1970s). Modern
vacuum deposition technology allows mirrors to be coated with extremely thin layers of nearly any material. The multilayer mirrors in an EUV telescope are coated with alternate layers of a light "spacer" element (such as
silicon) that absorbs EUV light only weakly, and a heavy "scatterer" element (such as
molybdenum) that absorbs EUV light very strongly. Perhaps 100 layers of each type might be placed on the mirror, with a thickness of around 10
nm each! The layer thickness is tightly controlled, so that at the desired wavelength, reflected photons from each layer interfere constructively. In this way, reflectivities of up to ~50% can be attained.
The multilayer technology allows conventional telescope forms (such as the
Cassegrain or
Ritchey-Chretien designs) to be used in a novel part of the spectrum. Solar imaging with multilayer EUV optics was pioneered in the
1990s by the
MSSTA and
NIXT sounding rockets, each of which flew on several five-minute missions into space. Multilayer EUV optics are also used in terrestrial
nanolithography rigs for fabrication of
microchips.
The EIT detector is a conventional
CCDs that are back-illuminated and specially thinned to admit the EUV photons. Because the detector is about equally sensitive to EUV and visible photons, and the Sun is about one
billion (10
9) times brighter in visible light than in EUV, special thin foil filters are used to block the visible light while admitting the EUV. The filters are made of extremely thin
aluminum foil, about 200 nm (0.2 micrometre) thick, and transmit about half of the incident EUV light while absorbing essentially all of the incident visible light.
History
EIT was a difficult sell to the scientific funding agencies, as it was not clear in the early
1990s that simple imaging of the corona would be scientifically useful (most of the other instruments on board SOHO are
spectrographs of various kinds). The EIT
PI,
Jean-Pierre Delaboudiniere, was forced to scrounge funding and resources from several locations to construct and launch the instrument. For example, EIT alone of the SOHO instruments does not have its own
flight computer; it is connected to the
LASCO instrument flight computer, and is treated operationally as an additional LASCO camera. No funding was available for a pointing adjustment mechanisms, so EIT is bolted directly to the spacecraft and hence forms the SOHO pointing reference: the other instruments all align themselves to the EIT images. Focus adjustment is achieved by
thermal expansion: the internal
survival heaters (found in most spaceborne instruments) are used to achieve microscopic changes in the size of the telescope structure and hence the mirror spacing. EIT was originally allocated only about 1 kbit/s of data -- about the same speed as a 110
baud teletype -- but after its utility became clear much more
telemetry bandwidth was allocated to it.
Related instruments
The technology in EIT is based on prototype instruments that were flown on the
sounding rocket payloads
MSSTA and
NIXT. The first multilayer telescope to image the full disk of the Sun in EUV was flown by
A.B.C. Walker and team in 1987 . The
TRACE spacecraft (launched into
LEO in the late
1990s) carries a similar multilayer imager, as do the planned
STEREO and
Solar Dynamics Observatory missions.
External links
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Latest EIT full-field images