Hyperion: The origin of the stars A far-UV space telescope for high-resolution spectroscopy over wide fields
Erika Hamden, David Schiminovich, Shouleh Nikzad, Neal J. Turner,, Blakesley Burkhart, Thomas J. Haworth, Keri Hoadley, Jinyoung Serena Kim,, Shmuel Bialyh, Geoff Bryden, Haeun Chung, Nia Imara, Rob Kennicutt, Jorge, Pineda, Shuo Konga, Yasuhiro Hasegawa, Ilaria Pascucci

TL;DR
Hyperion is a proposed far-ultraviolet space telescope designed for high-resolution spectroscopy of molecular hydrogen, aiming to study star formation, molecular cloud dynamics, and planet-forming disks in the Milky Way.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, efficient FUV spectroscopic instrument with dual resolution modes for detailed study of molecular hydrogen in star-forming regions.
Findings
Design of a 48 cm FUV spectrometer with high spectral resolution
Targeted observations of molecular hydrogen emission lines in star-forming regions
Potential to advance understanding of star and planet formation processes
Abstract
We present Hyperion, a mission concept recently proposed to the December 2021 NASA Medium Explorer announcement of opportunity. Hyperion explores the formation and destruction of molecular clouds and planet-forming disks in nearby star-forming regions of the Milky Way. It does this using long-slit, high-resolution spectroscopy of emission from fluorescing molecular hydrogen, which is a powerful far-ultraviolet (FUV) diagnostic. Molecular hydrogen (H2) is the most abundant molecule in the universe and a key ingredient for star and planet formation, but is typically not observed directly because its symmetric atomic structure and lack of a dipole moment mean there are no spectral lines at visible wavelengths and few in the infrared. Hyperion uses molecular hydrogen's wealth of FUV emission lines to achieve three science objectives: (1) determining how star formation is related to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Photocathodes and Microchannel Plates
