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Toward large-area sub-arcsecond x-ray telescopes

Authors :
Carolyn Atkins
Martin C. Weisskopf
William W. Zhang
Ralf K. Heilmann
Mark L. Schattenburg
Charles F. Lillie
Stuart McMuldroch
Michael E. Graham
Rudeger H. T. Wilke
Raul E. Riveros
Brian D. Ramsey
Jacqueline M. Roche
Ronald F. Elsner
Kiranmayee Kilaru
Kai Wing Chan
Jeffery J. Kolodziejczak
Paul B. Reid
David N. Burrows
Alexey Vikhlinin
Stephen L. O'Dell
Semyon Vaynman
Xiaoli Wang
Jian Cao
Ryan Allured
Timo T. Saha
Thomas L. Aldcroft
Mikhail V. Gubarev
Brandon D. Chalifoux
Daniel A. Schwartz
Susan Trolier-McKinstry
Melville P. Ulmer
Raegan L. Johnson-Wilke
Vincenzo Cotroneo
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
SPIE, 2014.

Abstract

The future of x-ray astronomy depends upon development of x-ray telescopes with larger aperture areas (approx. = 3 square meters) and fine angular resolution (approx. = 1 inch). Combined with the special requirements of nested grazing-incidence optics, the mass and envelope constraints of space-borne telescopes render such advances technologically and programmatically challenging. Achieving this goal will require precision fabrication, alignment, mounting, and assembly of large areas (approx. = 600 square meters) of lightweight (approx. = 1 kilogram/square meter areal density) high-quality mirrors at an acceptable cost (approx. = 1 million dollars/square meter of mirror surface area). This paper reviews relevant technological and programmatic issues, as well as possible approaches for addressing these issues-including active (in-space adjustable) alignment and figure correction.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........83a28cbda141b4dd2d0e9967c1ba5f41