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	Q&A: Chandra Mission
                        
                    
            Q:
               What was Dr. Steven Kissel role in the operation of Chandra?
             
               A:
				Dr. Kissel explains his work in the following quote.
				"My role in Chandra operation, specifically design and fabrication
				actually began with the Astro-D (ASCA) satellite which was the
				first use of X-ray CCDs in space. Participation in this US/Japan
				mission was intended to provide experience with X-ray CCDs in
				order to prove their suitability as detectors for the Chandra
				(then called AXAF) observatory. The great success of ASCA was
				encouraging and lessons learned in that program guided design
				and test strategies used in AXAF. An example of this was the
				realization that a "room temperature readout" capability would
				be crucial to verifying detector performance during assembly
				and pre-launch activity. One of my tasks was to make sure this
				capability was achieved.
				One of the Chandra science instruments, the ACIS (Advanced CCD
				Imaging Spectrometer) uses and array of 10 Lincoln Laboratory
				fabricated CCDs. We received several hundred such devices
				each of which required testing and evaluation. My role was to
				fabricate testing facilities, X-ray calibration beam lines
				and cooling systems for example, and to undertake the initial
				testing or "screening". This evaluation determined the correct
				operating parameters, voltages and clocking waveforms, that
				would yield maximum performance from the subsequent detector
				assembly. During this period much practical experience about
				CCD operation was learned and incorporated into the higher
				assembly. An example of this is the little known but quite
				essential "jitter dac" trick which is used at the start of
				every science observation to tame a start up dark current
				instability.
				The role which has had the longest lasting impact is that of
				the "institutional memory of CCD operation" which basically
				means that I get to try all the unusual operational techniques
				before they get applied to the actual spacecraft. This activity
				continues even to this date where questions about radiation
				damage, high temperature bakeout and CTI suppression can only be addressed by laboratory experiments on "sibling" CCDs.
				
      
             
   
        



