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Design and advancement status of the Beam Expander Testing X-ray facility (BEaTriX)

Authors :
Gianpiero Tagliaferri
Mauro Ghigo
G. Vecchi
Carlo Pelliciari
Giovanni Bianucci
Andrea Zappettini
C. Ferrari
Daniele Spiga
Massimiliano Rossi
B. Salmaso
Luigina Arcangeli
Giuseppe Valsecchi
Giovanni Pareschi
ITA
Source :
Advances in X-Ray/EUV Optics and Components XI, Conference on Advances in X-Ray/EUV Optics and Components XI held as part of the SPIE International Symposium on Optics + Photonics, San Diego, CA, USA, AUG 31-SEP 01, 2016, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Spiga, D.; Pelliciari, C.; Salmaso, B.; Arcangeli, L.; Bianucci, G.; Ferrari, C.; Ghigo, M.; Pareschi, G.; Rossi, M.; Tagliaferri, G.; Valsecchi, G.; Vecchi, G.; Zappettini, A./congresso_nome:Conference on Advances in X-Ray%2FEUV Optics and Components XI held as part of the SPIE International Symposium on Optics + Photonics/congresso_luogo:San Diego, CA, USA/congresso_data:AUG 31-SEP 01, 2016/anno:2016/pagina_da:/pagina_a:/intervallo_pagine
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The BEaTriX (Beam Expander Testing X-ray facility) project is an X-ray apparatus under construction at INAF/OAB to generate a broad (200 x 60 mm2), uniform and low-divergent X-ray beam within a small lab (6 x 15 m2). BEaTriX will consist of an X-ray source in the focus a grazing incidence paraboloidal mirror to obtain a parallel beam, followed by a crystal monochromation system and by an asymmetrically-cut diffracting crystal to perform the beam expansion to the desired size. Once completed, BEaTriX will be used to directly perform the quality control of focusing modules of large X-ray optics such as those for the ATHENA X-ray observatory, based on either Silicon Pore Optics (baseline) or Slumped Glass Optics (alternative), and will thereby enable a direct quality control of angular resolution and effective area on a number of mirror modules in a short time, in full X-ray illumination and without being affected by the finite distance of the X-ray source. However, since the individual mirror modules for ATHENA will have an optical quality of 3-4 arcsec HEW or better, BEaTriX is required to produce a broad beam with divergence below 1-2 arcsec, and sufficient flux to quickly characterize the PSF of the module without being significantly affected by statistical uncertainties. Therefore, the optical components of BEaTriX have to be selected and/or manufactured with excellent optical properties in order to guarantee the final performance of the system. In this paper we report the final design of the facility and a detailed performance simulation.<br />Comment: Accepted paper, pre-print version. The finally published manuscript can be downloaded from http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2238952

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in X-Ray/EUV Optics and Components XI
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a27f8be3fb9691ac89125918026e39a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2238952