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		| Paper: | 
		Studies of White Dwarfs with a Low-cost EUV Observatory | 
	 
	
		| Volume: | 
		469, 18th European White Dwarf Workshop (EUROWD12) | 
	 
	
		| Page: | 
		241 | 
	 
	
		| Authors: | 
		Barstow, M. A.; Casewell, S. L.; Kowalski, M. P.; Wood, K.; Bannister, N. P.; Eves, S.; Navarthinam, N. | 
	 
	
	
		| Abstract: | 
		The   various  demands   on   funding   agencies   make   it  difficult   to  sustain   the   level   of expenditure  required  to  provide  the  broad  range of space  astronomy missions  that  the research community  would  like  to have  available.  Multi-billion pound/dollar observatories such as Chandra, XMM-Newton and  HST have  been enormously successful, but JWST  has been delayed and  plans for an equivalent large X-ray mission seem to be on-hold. Furthermore, the medium size ESA and NASA missions provide only a small number of opportunities  over  the  next  decade. Much exciting  and  important science, by default,  will not be  done. If satellite  mission  costs could  be  reduced significantly, by a factor  of 5 to 10, we would  open  up a new  parameter space of opportunity  that  is  not currently  offered  by any  agency. Significant improvement in instrument technology  coupled with simplification of  optical  systems  and   the  development  of  efficient,  high  performance  small  satellite platforms  and  ground  systems has led  to the  prospect of the  development  of some low- cost   opportunities.  In  this  paper,  we  outline  one   such  possible  mission,  based on  a successful sounding rocket-borne payload. This comprises a high throughput normal incidence extreme ultraviolet spectrometer, with the design adapted for accommodation on the  SSTL  300  platform.  We  make  use of a  segmented diffraction  grating  to  provide  an overall  wavelength  coverage from  ≈ 170–250Å by tuning  the  multi-layers  of the  individual elements  to different,  overlapping  ranges. We outline  the  capability  and  science goals  of the mission. | 
	 
	
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