Euclid Structural-Thermal-Optical Performance
Euclid Collaboration: A. Anselmi, R. Laureijs, G. D. Racca, G. Costa, L. Courcould Mifsud, J.-C. Cuillandre, M. Gottero, H. Hoekstra, K. Kuijken, V. Mareschi, L. Miller, S. Mottini, D. Stramaccioni, B. Altieri, A. Amara, S. Andreon, N. Auricchio, C. Baccigalupi, M. Baldi

TL;DR
The paper details the structural-thermal-optical performance analysis of the Euclid telescope, demonstrating it meets image quality requirements and analyzing in-orbit performance and sensitivities affecting weak lensing measurements.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive STOP analysis verifying Euclid's telescope performance and insights into in-orbit temperature effects on image quality.
Findings
Prelaunch analysis shows optical perturbations below limits.
In-orbit temperature variations are small but affect PSF stability.
Analysis helps interpret in-orbit performance and identify sensitivities.
Abstract
The Euclid system performance is defined in terms of image quality metrics tuned to the weak gravitational lensing (WL) cosmological probe. WL induces stringent requirements on the shape and stability of the VIS instrument system point spread function (PSF). The PSF is affected by error contributions from the telescope, the focal plane and image motion, and is controlled by a global error budget with error allocations to each contributor. Aims. During spacecraft development, we verified through a structural-thermal-optical performance (STOP) analysis that the built and verified telescope with its spacecraft interface meets the in-orbit steady-state and transient image quality requirements. Methods. For the purposes of the STOP analysis, a detailed finite-element mathematical model was set up and a standard set of test cases, both steady-state and transient, was defined, comprising…
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