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In-flight verification of the calibration and performance of the ASTRO-H (Hitomi) Soft X-Ray Spectrometer

Authors :
Hideyuki Mori
Satoshi Sugita
Shinya Yamada
Dan McCammon
Ryuichi Fujimoto
Megan E. Eckart
Yoshitaka Ishisaki
Manabu Ishida
Cor P. de Vries
Sho Kurashima
Maurice A. Leutenegger
Richard L. Kelley
Naomichi Kikuchi
Peter J. Serlemitsos
Nozomi Nakaniwa
Yoh Takei
Kosuke Sato
Jan-Willem den Herder
Noriko Y. Yamasaki
Hiromi Seta
Gregory V. Brown
Kazuhisa Mitsuda
Meng P. Chiao
Kevin R. Boyce
Gary A. Sneiderman
Caroline A. Kilbourne
Maxim Markevitch
Masahiro Tsujimoto
Yoshitomo Maeda
Shu Koyama
Toshiki Sato
Yuzuru Tawara
F. Scott Porter
Matteo Guainazzi
Yang Soong
Stéphane Paltani
Takayuki Hayashi
Makoto Tashiro
D. Haas
Tomomi Watanabe
Marc Audard
Andrew Szymkowiak
Robert Petre
Makoto Sawada
Takashi Okajima
Akihiro Furuzawa
Ryo Iizuka
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
SPIE, 2016.

Abstract

The Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS) onboard the Astro-H (Hitomi) orbiting x-ray observatory featured an array of 36 silicon thermistor x-ray calorimeters optimized to perform high spectral resolution x-ray imaging spectroscopy of astrophysical sources in the 0.3-12 keV band. Extensive pre- flight calibration measurements are the basis for our modeling of the pulse-height-energy relation and energy resolution for each pixel and event grade, telescope collecting area, detector efficiency, and pulse arrival time. Because of the early termination of mission operations, we needed to extract the maximum information from observations performed only days into the mission when the onboard calibration sources had not yet been commissioned and the dewar was still coming into thermal equilibrium, so our technique for reconstructing the per-pixel time-dependent pulse-height-energy relation had to be modified. The gain scale was reconstructed using a combination of an absolute energy scale calibration at a single time using a fiducial from an onboard radioactive source, and calibration of a dominant time-dependent gain drift component using a dedicated calibration pixel, as well as a residual time-dependent variation using spectra from the Perseus cluster of galaxies. The energy resolution was also measured using the onboard radioactive sources. It is consistent with instrument-level measurements accounting for the modest increase in noise due to spacecraft systems interference. We use observations of two pulsars to validate our models of the telescope area and detector efficiency, and to derive a more accurate value for the thickness of the gate valve Be window, which had not been opened by the time mission operations ceased. We use observations of the Crab pulsar to refine the pixel-to-pixel timing and validate the absolute timing.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f3c23fb49d7c813fdbccf8c6653afc9b