SWAS was designed to study the chemical composition, energy balance and structure of
interstellar clouds, both galactic and extragalactic, and investigate the processes of
stellar and planetary formation. Its sole instrument is a telescope operating in the submillimeter wavelengths of
far infrared and
microwave radiation. The telescope is composed of three main components: a elliptical off-axis
Cassegrain reflector with a beam width of 4
arcminutes at operating frequencies, two
Schottky diode receivers, and an acousto-optical spectrometer. The system is sensitive to frequencies between 487–557
GHz (538–616
μm), which allows it to focus on the
spectral lines of molecular
oxygen (O2) at 487.249 GHz; neutral
carbon () at 492.161 GHz; isotopic
water (H218O) at 548.676 GHz; isotopic
carbon monoxide (13CO) at 550.927 GHz; and water (H2O) at 556.936 GHz. Detailed 1° x 1° maps of giant molecular and dark cloud cores are generated from a grid of measurements taken at 3.7 arcminutes spacings. SWAS's submillimeter radiometers are a pair of passively cooled subharmonic Schottky diode receivers, with receiver noise figures of 2500-3000 K. An acousto-optical spectrometer (AOS) was provided by the
University of Cologne, in
Germany. Outputs of the two SWAS receivers are combined to form a final intermediate frequency, which extends from 1.4 to 2.8 GHz and is dispersed into 1400 1-MHz channels by the AOS. SWAS is designed to make pointed observations stabilized on three axes, with a position accuracy of about 38 arcseconds, and jitter of about 24 arcseconds. Attitude information is obtained from gyroscopes whose drift is corrected via a star tracker. Momentum wheels are used to maneuver the spacecraft. == Experiment ==