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PolarLight: a CubeSat X-ray Polarimeter based on the Gas Pixel Detector

Authors :
Feng, Hua
Jiang, Weichun
Minuti, Massimo
Wu, Qiong
Jung, Aera
Yang, Dongxin
Citraro, Saverio
Nasimi, Hikmat
Yu, Jiandong
Jin, Ge
Huang, Jiahui
Zeng, Ming
An, Peng
Baldini, Luca
Bellazzini, Ronaldo
Brez, Alessandro
Latronico, Luca
Sgrò, Carmelo
Spandre, Gloria
Pinchera, Michele
Muleri, Fabio
Soffitta, Paolo
Costa, Enrico
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The gas pixel detector (GPD) is designed and developed for high-sensitivity astronomical X-ray polarimetry, which is a new window about to open in a few years. Due to the small mass, low power, and compact geometry of the GPD, we propose a CubeSat mission Polarimeter Light (PolarLight) to demonstrate and test the technology directly in space. There is no optics but a collimator to constrain the field of view to 2.3 degrees. Filled with pure dimethyl ether (DME) at 0.8 atm and sealed by a beryllium window of 100 micron thick, with a sensitive area of about 1.4 mm by 1.4 mm, PolarLight allows us to observe the brightest X-ray sources on the sky, with a count rate of, e.g., ~0.2 counts/s from the Crab nebula. The PolarLight is 1U in size and mounted in a 6U CubeSat, which was launched into a low Earth Sun-synchronous orbit on October 29, 2018, and is currently under test. More launches with improved designs are planned in 2019. These tests will help increase the technology readiness for future missions such as the enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry (eXTP), better understand the orbital background, and may help constrain the physics with observations of the brightest objects.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in Experimental Astronomy

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1903.01619
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10686-019-09625-z