The SPace-based InterFerometer Feasibility (SPIFF) Project: Enabling Future High-Resolution Astronomy Across the EM Spectrum
Berke Vow Ricketti, Victoria Yankelevich, Chris Benson, Renske Smit, Sebastian Kamann, Ettore Pedretti, Sebastian Marino, Gerard van Belle, Stephen Eales, Chris Bee, Mark Wyatt, Matthew Smith, Tim D. Pearce, Emily Williams, Rebecca Harwin, David Pearson, Andy Vick

TL;DR
The SPIFF project aims to demonstrate the feasibility of space-based interferometry, enabling high-resolution astronomy across the electromagnetic spectrum and positioning the UK as a leader in this emerging field.
Contribution
It conducts a comprehensive survey of science cases, defines key requirements, and plans a technology demonstration mission to advance space interferometry capabilities.
Findings
Identified key science cases benefiting from space interferometry
Mapped critical technological requirements for future missions
Developed a plan for a demonstration mission to raise technology readiness levels
Abstract
A plethora of astronomical science cases can only be achieved with high angular resolution observations, and we can expect the number of these to grow as astronomers are constrained by the size limitations of single-aperture space telescopes, making space-based interferometry inevitable. However, the enabling technologies do not have flight heritage at the system level, and the concept remains immature to much of the community, meaning no direct-detection synthetic-aperture space-based interferometer has yet flown and an opportunity exists for the UK to take a world leading role. Here we propose the SPace-based InterFerometry Feasibility (SPIFF) Project as a program to address both issues simultaneously by: 1) completing a thorough survey of the science cases across the EM spectrum that would directly benefit from, or be impossible without, space-based interferometry; 2) down selecting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Superconducting and THz Device Technology · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
