The spacecraft payload consists of the following instruments: •
CERTO: the Coherent Electromagnetic Radio Tomography experiment is a radio beacon that will provide plasma density profiles and information on phase and amplitude scintillation of radio signals. CERTO is provided by the
Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). Principal investigator: Paul Bernhardt. •
CORISS: the C/NOFS Occultation Receiver for Ionospheric Sensing and Specification (CORISS) instrument is a
GPS dual-frequency receiver designed to measure line-of-sight TEC. CORISS is provided by
The Aerospace Corporation. Principal investigator: Paul Straus. •
Ion Velocity Meter (IVM): consists of a pair of sensors designed to measure the in situ ion velocity vector, ion temperature, and ion composition. The IVM is provided by the William B. Hanson Center for Space Sciences at the University of Texas at Dallas. IVM is a component of the
CINDI package funded by NASA.
Principal investigator: Dr. Roderick A. Heelis. •
Neutral Wind Meter (NWM): a two sensor package designed to measure the neutral wind velocity. NWM is provided by the William B. Hanson Center for Space Sciences at the University of Texas at Dallas. Like IVM, NWM is a component of the CINDI package funded by NASA. Principal investigator: Greg Earle. • Ram Wind Sensor (RWS): measures the ram component of the neutral wind by ionizing a fraction of the incoming neutral gas then performing retarding potential analysis on those ions. • Cross Track Sensor (CTS): is a hollow hemispherical dome divided into four independent chambers with a miniaturized Bayard-Alpert
hot filament ionization gauge in each chamber. Four small holes in the dome allow the neutral gas to stream into the chambers. The pressure in any chamber will depend on the arrival angle of the neutral wind. •
Planar Langmuir Probe (PLP): a two sensor package consisting an ion trap designed to measure ion density fluctuations and a
Langmuir probe. PLP is provided by the Air Force Research Laboratory. Principal investigator: Patrick Roddy, formerly Donald Hunton. •
Vector Electric Field Instrument (VEFI): is a collection of instruments including 6 electric field booms, a 3-axis
magnetometer, a spherical
Langmuir probe, and a
lightning detector. VEFI is provided by NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) with funding from the Air Force Research Laboratory. Principal investigator: Dr. Robert F. Pfaff. == Experiments ==