The assembly, characterization, and performance of SISTINE
Nicholas Nell, Kevin France, Nicholas Kruczek, Brian Fleming, Stefan, Ulrich, Patrick Behr, Manuel A. Quijada, Javier Del Hoyo, John Hennessy

TL;DR
SISTINE is a rocket-borne UV spectrograph designed to study the radiation environment of nearby stars, employing advanced coatings and detectors to support future space UV missions.
Contribution
This paper presents the design, technological innovations, and successful deployment of the SISTINE spectrograph for stellar UV observations.
Findings
Successfully observed Procyon A and Alpha Centauri A and B
Demonstrated advanced UV coating and detector technologies
Provided spectral imaging over a broad UV bandpass
Abstract
The Suborbital Imaging Spectrograph for Transition region Irradiance from Nearby Exoplanet host stars (SISTINE) is a rocket-borne ultraviolet (UV) imaging spectrograph designed to probe the radiation environment of nearby stars. SISTINE operates over a bandpass of 98 -- 127 and 130 -- 158 nm, capturing a broad suite of emission lines tracing the full 10 -- 10 K formation temperature range critical for reconstructing the full UV radiation field incident on planets orbiting solar-type stars. SISTINE serves as a platform for key technology developments for future ultraviolet observatories. SISTINE operates at moderate resolving power (1500) while providing spectral imaging over an angular extent of 6', with 2" resolution at the slit center. The instrument is composed of an f/14 Cassegrain telescope that feeds a 2.1x magnifying spectrograph, utilizing a blazed…
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