The astrometric instrument of Gaia: Principles

2005 
Compared with Hipparcos, Gaia will give an enormous improvement in accuracy, completeness and number of stars: about two orders of magnitude in accuracy, four orders in number, and a completeness limit that is 12 magnitudes fainter. How is all this possible? The answer is: by a combination of many factors, the most important being bigger and more efficient detectors, and bigger optics. The method of astrometric measurements by Gaia is described from first principles, and the fundamental limitations explained in terms of physics (diffraction and photon noise), geometry, temporal sampling and reference frames. Although Gaia is basically a self-calibrating instrument, things have to be stable enough over time scales that are long enough for the calibrations to be carried out, and the corresponding requirements are outlined. To achieve microarcsecond accuracy is technically extremely demanding, but feasible with a clever and careful design of the instrument. (Less)
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