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Imaging Polarimeter for a Sub-MeV Gamma-Ray All-Sky Survey using an Electron-Tracking Compton Camera

Authors :
Komura, Shotaro
Takada, Atsushi
Mizumura, Yoshitaka
Miyamoto, Shohei
Takemura, Taito
Kishimoto, Tetsuro
Kubo, Hidetoshi
Kurosawa, Shunsuke
Matsuoka, Yoshihiro
Miuchi, Kentaro
Mizumoto, Tetsuya
Nakamasu, Yuma
Nakamura, Kiseki
Oda, Makoto
Parker, Joseph D.
Sawano, Tatsuya
Sonoda, Shinya
Tanimori, Toru
Tomono, Dai
Yoshikawa, Kei
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

X-ray and gamma-ray polarimetry is a promising tool to study the geometry and the magnetic configuration of various celestial objects, such as binary black holes or gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). However, statistically significant polarizations have been detected in few of the brightest objects. Even though future polarimeters using X-ray telescopes are expected to observe weak persistent sources, there are no effective approaches to survey transient and serendipitous sources with a wide field of view (FoV). Here we present an electron-tracking Compton camera (ETCC) as a highly-sensitive gamma-ray imaging polarimeter. The ETCC provides powerful background rejection and a high modulation factor over a FoV of up to 2$\pi$ sr thanks to its excellent imaging based on a well-defined point spread function. Importantly, we demonstrated for the first time the stability of the modulation factor under realistic conditions of off-axis incidence and huge backgrounds using the SPring-8 polarized X-ray beam. The measured modulation factor of the ETCC was 0.65 $\pm$ 0.01 at 150 keV for an off-axis incidence with an oblique angle of 30$^\circ$ and was not degraded compared to the 0.58 $\pm$ 0.02 at 130 keV for on-axis incidence. These measured results are consistent with the simulation results. Consequently, we found that the satellite-ETCC proposed in Tanimori et al. (2015) would provide all-sky surveys of weak persistent sources of 13 mCrab with 10% polarization for a 10$^{7}$ s exposure and over 20 GRBs down to a $6\times10^{-6}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ fluence and 10% polarization during a one-year observation.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1703.07600
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa68dc