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High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager HESSI

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What is a Solar Flare ? ... The Sun at Solar Minimum and Maximum. EUV Images Telescope (EIT) ... High Resolution Spectroscopy of Solar Gamma-Ray Lines ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager HESSI


1
High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager HESSI
2
HESSI Science Objective
To explore the basic physics of particle
acceleration and explosive energy release in
solar flares
  • Impulsive Energy Release in the Corona
  • Acceleration of Electrons, Protons, and Ions
  • Plasma Heating to Tens of Millions of degrees
  • Energy and Particle Transport and Dissipation

3
What is a Solar Flare ?
  • A solar flare occurs when magnetic energy that
    has built up in the solar atmosphere (Corona) is
    suddenly released.
  • Radiation is emitted across virtually the entire
    electromagnetic spectrum (radio, optical, (E)UV,
    X- and gamma Ray).
  • The amount of energy released is very large
    1027-1032 ergs
  • 3 Stage
  • Precursor trigger of magnetic energy release
    (soft-xray)
  • Impulsive protons, ions and electrons are
    accelerated,
  • Heating of plasma to Millions of degree in time
    scale minutes to hours
  • Many models exist, but impulsive energy release
    is poorly understood
  • Solar flare activities are correlated with the 11
    year solar cycle

4
The Sun at Solar Minimum and Maximum
EUV Images Telescope (EIT)
5
How are Flares seen in the EUV (171A) by the
TRACE Satellite?
M. Aschwanden et al, Lockheed Martin Advanced
Technology
6
Example of a SMM Observation
7
Composite Flare Energy Spectrum
8
Problems to be solved with HESSI
  • Needed
  • Large energy range (3kev to 15MeV), good energy
    resolution (better than 1)
  • Good spatial resolution (up to 2 arcsec), Images
  • Good time resolution (2 sec for an image)
  • Low energy threshold (3keV)
  • How can a large fraction of magnetically stored
    energy (30) to be converted into kinetic energy
    in such a very short time?
  • Are loops in a quasi-steady hydrodynamic
    equilibrium?
  • Where does the heating and acceleration occur?
  • How are such high electron and ion energy
    possible?
  • Why are the electrons and ions quasi
    simultaneously accelerated?
  • Is the Corona heated by micro flares? (yes if
    NE-a and agt2 and nano flares exist)

9
HESSI Non-Solar Science Objectives
  • The Crab Nebula
  • Imaging spectroscopy with 2 resolution
  • Gamma Ray Bursts and Cosmic Transient Sources
  • Detected over a large fraction of the sky
  • High resolution spectroscopy
  • Search for cyclotron line features
  • Steady X-ray and gamma-ray sources (point and
    diffuse)
  • Detect by Earth occultation or through the rear
    grids
  • Obtain high resolution spectra
  • Search for line features

A1309.04
10
HESSI Prime Responsibilities
  • UC Berkeley Germanium detectors, cryostat,
    electronics
  • I T
  • Ground station, MOC/SOC
  • Data Analysis
  • GSFC Grid characterization testing
  • Cryocooler
  • Data analysis, distribution, and archiving
  • PSI (Switzerland) Telescope
  • Aspect system
  • Twist Monitoring System
  • Spectrum Astro Spacecraft
  • ETH-Zurich European Data Center
  • Data Analysis and archiving

A1309.013
11
PSI Involvement
  • Instrument
  • Fritz Burri Technician
  • Reinhold Henneck RAS, SAS
  • Martin Fivan PhD Student, Simulation, Aspect
    System S/W
  • Aliko Mchedlshishvili Electronic, Aspect Data
    Processor
  • Peter Ming Manager
  • Knud Thomsen Mechanical Design, Qualification
  • Joerg Welte Designer
  • Alex Zehnder Co-I, TMS
  • Science
  • Kaspar Arzner
  • Manuel Guedel
  • PSI Infrastructure
  • total about 30 well motivated collaborators

A1309.014
12
HESSI Imaging Technique Rotation Grid
Collimators (RMC)
13
Imaging Simulation
  •                    
  •                    
  •                    
  •                    
  •                    
  •                    

Box 1 is a map of the sky near the assumed
point-like X-ray source.
Box 2 represents what the detectorr see as a
function of time as X-ray photons from the
off-axis point source indicated in Box 1 pass
through the grids.
Box 3 shows the number of X-ray photons that pass
through both grids and reach the detector as a
function of time while the instrument rotates.
Box 4 and 5 show how the image can be
reconstructed from the probability distributions
shown in Box 1 and the counting rate in the
detector shown in Boxes 2 and 3. The point source
can be clearly seen in the bottom left corner. A
second "ghost" source appears in the upper right
corner and faint rings, referred to as
"side-lobes" appear around both "source"
locations. These artifacts can be removed.
Animation made by Ed Schmahl, GSFC
14
(No Transcript)
15
Example Yohko Flare
Countrate in the 9 HESSI grids
16
HESSI Imaging
  • Requirement
  • Mechanical twist stability to be better than 20
    arcsec. (achieved 5 arcsec)
  • Solar aspect (pointing) to be better than 0.4
    arcsec for each photon (Solar Aspect System SAS)
  • Roll Angle (RAS) to be better than 1 armin
    1arcsec at limb

17
HESSI FM Imager at Contraves
18
End-to-End Test
19
Solar Aspect System
  • Operation Principle
  • The Sun is imaged on 3 linear CCD 120o spaced.
  • The CCD are readout at 128Hz
  • Onboard processing of limb position, download
    needed data.
  • On-ground aspect reconstruction.
  • Calibration on ground. Result

20
Roll Aspect System (RAS)
21
RAS
22
PSI Twist Monitor System
23
Results TMS
24
HESSI at JPL 2nd Vibration Tests
25
HESSI at VAFB (April 01)
26
Launch Date 1. June 01 !?
27
3D Model of HESSI
28
HESSI Firsts
  • Hard X-Ray Imaging Spectroscopy
  • High Resolution Spectroscopy of Solar Gamma-Ray
    Lines
  • Hard X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Imaging above 100 keV
  • Imaging of Narrow Gamma-Ray Lines
  • High Resolution X-ray and Gamma-Ray Spectra of
    Cosmic Sources
  • Hard X-Ray Images of the Crab Nebula with
    2-arcsecond Resolution

A1309.07
29
HESSI Observational Characteristics
  • Energy Range 3 keV to 15 MeV
  • Energy Resolution (FWHM) lt1 keV FWHM at 3 keV
  • increasing to 5 keV at 15 MeV
  • Angular Resolution 2 arcseconds to 100 keV
  • 7 arcseconds to 400 keV
  • 36 arcseconds to 15 MeV
  • Temporal Resolution Tens of ms for basic image
  • 2 s for detailed image
  • Field of View Full Sun
  • Effective Area - cm2 10-3 at 3 keV, 50 at 10 keV
  • (with attenuators out) 60 at 100 keV, 20 at
    10 MeV
  • Numbers of flares 1000 imaged to gt100 keV.
  • 100 with spectroscopy to 10 MeV

30
Instrument Sensitivity
31
Angular Coverage vs. Photon Energy
32
Relative Modulation Amplitudevs. Photon Energy
33
Composite Flare Spectrum
34
Energy Resolution vs. Photon Energy
D1309.001
35
Prelaunch Twist Monitoring System (TMS)
A1309.026
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