The CCOR Compact Coronagraphs for the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-19 (GOES-19) and the Space Weather Follow On (SWFO) Missions
A. F. Thernisien, D. H. Chua, M. T. Carter, N. B. Rich, M. Noya, T. A. Babich, C. E. Crippa, B. Baugh, Y. Bordlemay, D. Socker, D. Biesecker, C. Korendyke, D. Wang, D. Vassiliadis, N-Y. Wang, S. Abbay, S. Bagnall, L. Balmaceda, S. Brown, J. Bonafede, D. Boyer, J. Declet

TL;DR
The CCOR Compact Coronagraphs are compact, high-performance solar coronagraphs designed for NOAA satellites to detect and track CMEs, enhancing space weather prediction capabilities with reduced size and comparable performance to larger predecessors.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design, implementation, and operational deployment of the CCOR series of compact coronagraphs for NOAA satellites, offering a smaller yet effective alternative to traditional coronagraphs.
Findings
CCOR-1 on GOES-U launched in 2024; CCOR-2 on SWFO-L1 scheduled for 2025.
Both instruments have a field of view similar to SOHO LASCO C3.
Compact design reduces size and mass with acceptable signal-to-noise ratio.
Abstract
The CCOR Compact Coronagraph is a series of two operational solar coronagraphs sponsored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). They were designed, built, and tested by the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). The CCORs will be used by NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center to detect and track Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) and predict the Space Weather. CCOR-1 is on board the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite -U (GOES-U, now GOES-19/GOES-East). GOES-U was launched from Kennedy Space Flight Center, Florida, on 25 June 2024. CCOR-2 is on board the Space Weather Follow On at Lagrange point 1 (SWFO-L1). SWFO-L1 is scheduled to launch in the fall of 2025. SWFO will be renamed SOLAR-1 once it reaches L1. The CCORs are white-light coronagraphs that have a field of view and performance similar to the SOHO LASCO C3 coronagraph. CCOR-1 FOV spans from 4 to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace exploration and regulation · Spacecraft Design and Technology
