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High-resolution x-ray telescopes

Authors :
O'Dell, S. L.
Brissenden, R. J.
Davis, W. N.
Elsner, R. F.
Elvis, M.
Freeman, M.
Gaetz, T.
Gorenstein, P.
Gubarev, M. V.
Jerius, D.
Juda, M.
Kolodziejczak, J. J.
Murray, S.
Petre, R.
Podgorski, W.
Ramsey, B. D.
Reid, P. B.
Saha, T.
Schwartz, D. A.
Trolier-McKinstry, S.
Weisskopf, M. C.
Wilke, R. H. T.
Wolk, S.
Zhang, W. W.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

High-energy astrophysics is a relatively young scientific field, made possible by space-borne telescopes. During the half-century history of x-ray astronomy, the sensitivity of focusing x-ray telescopes-through finer angular resolution and increased effective area-has improved by a factor of a 100 million. This technological advance has enabled numerous exciting discoveries and increasingly detailed study of the high-energy universe-including accreting (stellar-mass and super-massive) black holes, accreting and isolated neutron stars, pulsar-wind nebulae, shocked plasma in supernova remnants, and hot thermal plasma in clusters of galaxies. As the largest structures in the universe, galaxy clusters constitute a unique laboratory for measuring the gravitational effects of dark matter and of dark energy. Here, we review the history of high-resolution x-ray telescopes and highlight some of the scientific results enabled by these telescopes. Next, we describe the planned next-generation x-ray-astronomy facility-the International X-ray Observatory (IXO). We conclude with an overview of a concept for the next next-generation facility-Generation X. The scientific objectives of such a mission will require very large areas (about 10000 m2) of highly-nested lightweight grazing-incidence mirrors with exceptional (about 0.1-arcsecond) angular resolution. Achieving this angular resolution with lightweight mirrors will likely require on-orbit adjustment of alignment and figure.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, SPIE Conference 7803 "Adaptive X-ray Optics", part of SPIE Optics+Photonics 2010, San Diego CA, 2010 August 2-5

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1010.4892
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.862315