Faint Object Spectrograph
Image:Foslarge sm.jpg|thumb|The Faint Object Spectrograph. This picture was taken after FOS was brought back to the Earth again. Credit: NASA/ESA.
The Faint Object Spectrograph was a spectrograph installed on the Hubble Space Telescope. It was replaced by the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph in 1997, and is now on display in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC.
FOS facts
- Instrument type: Spectrograph
- Wavelength range: 115 to 850 nm
The digicons suffered from inadequate magnetic shielding, which meant that a static image was smeared over several pixels; the red digicon suffered most from this. Also, either the blue detector or one of the mirrors in the system was contaminated in such a way as to remove sensitivity below 150 nm; this was a serious problem since it makes the Lyman-alpha line at 121.6 nm inaccessible.