Title: P1253814641gtDOf
1Expected Improvements in Imaging
G. Pareschi
INAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
2Outline
- Historical remarks on high energy imaging optics
- Hard X-ray focusing telescope Simbol-X
- Wide-field X-ray optics
- Future large size X-ray missions (XEUS)
3X-ray astronomical optics history in pills
- 1895 Roentgen discovers X-rays
- 1948 First succesfull attempt of the
focalization of an X-ray beam by a
total-reflection optics (Baez) - 1952 H. Wolter proposes the use of
two-reflection optics based on conics for X-ray
microscopy - 1960 R. Giacconi and B. Rossi propose the use
of grazing incidence focusing optics for X-ray
telescopes - 1962 discovery by Giacconi et al. of Sco-X1,
the first extra-solar X-ray source - 1963 Giacconi and Rossi fly the first (small)
Wolter I optics to take images of Sun in X-rays - 1965 second flight of a Wolter I focusing
optics (Giacconi Lindslay) - 1973 SKYLAB carry onboard two small X-ray
optics for the study of the Sun - 1978 Einstein, the first satellite with
focusing optics enterely dedicated to X-rays - 1983 EXOSAT operated (first European mission
with X-ray optics aboard) - 1990 ROSAT, first All Sky Survey in X-rays by
means of a focusing telescope with high imaging
capabilities - 1993 ASCA, a multimudular focusing telescope
with enhanced effective area for spectroscopic
purposes - 1996 BeppoSAX, a broad-band satellite with Ni
electroformed replicated optics - 1999 launch of Chandra, the X-ray telescope
with best angular resolution, and XMM-Newton, the
X-ray telescope with most Effective Area - 2004 launch of the Swift satellite devoted to
the GRBs investigation (with aboard XRT) - 2005 launch of Suzaku with high throughput
optics for enhanced spectroscopy studies with
bolometers
4Imaging experiments using Bragg reflection from
replicated mica pseudo-cylindrical optics
E. Fermi Thesis of Laurea, Formazione di
immagini con i raggi Roentgen (Imaging
formation with Roentgen rays), Univ. of Pisa
(1922)
Thanks to Giorgio Palumbo!
5Present Astronomical optics technologies HEW Vs
Mass/geometrical area
6Present Astronomical optics technologies HEW Vs
Mass/geometrical area
7Present Astronomical optics technologies HEW Vs
Mass/geometrical area
8X-ray optics by Ni electroforming replication
BeppoSAX
Jet-X/Swift
XMM-Newton
9X-ray optics by Ni electroforming replication
BeppoSAX
Now the Ni electroforming approach, born and
set-up by Citterio et al. For BeppoSAX is a
technology almost of-the-shelf for small/medium
size missions. It will be used for e-Rosita, SVOM
and Polar-X
Jet-X/Swift
XMM-Newton
10The focusing problem in the hard X-ray region (gt
10 keV)
F focal length R reflectivity L mirror
height q incidence angle
11The focusing problem in the hard X-ray region (gt
10 keV)
F focal length R reflectivity L mirror
height q incidence angle
12The focusing problem in the hard X-ray region (gt
10 keV)
At photon energies gt 10 keV the cut-off angles
for total reflection are very small also for
heavy metals ? the geometrical areas with usual
focal lengths (gt 10 m) are in general negligible
F focal length R reflectivity L mirror
height q incidence angle
13Focal Length Vs. Diameters for SIMBOL-X and other
X-ray telescopes
0.6 o
Aeff ? F2 x qc2 x R2
14Focal Length Vs. Diameters for SIMBOL-X and other
X-ray telescopes
0.6 o
The Formation Flight architecture offers the
opportunity to implement long FL telescopes!
Aeff ? F2 x qc2 x R2
15The formation flight contribution
16The formation flight contribution
17The formation flight contribution
18The formation flight contribution
19Wide band multilayers
X-ray supermirrors
Optical supermirrors in a beetle skin
b)
- Beetle Aspidomorpha Tecta
- TEM section of the skin
- b) Reflectivity in the optical band nel visibile.
CREDITS Dr. Naoyuki Ohnishi Chubu University
Japan Dr. Yasushi Ogasaka Nagoya Univ. - Japan
a)
1 mm
CREDITS Dr. A. R. Parker Dep. Of
Zoology Oxford University UK
20Top-level scientific requirements
Energy band 0.5 80 keV
Field of view (at 30 keV) 12 (diameter)
On-axis effective area 100 cm2 at 0.5 keV 1000 cm2 at 2 keV 600 cm2 at 8 keV 300 cm2 at 30 keV 100 cm2 at 70 keV 50 cm2 at 80 keV (goal)
Detectors background lt 2?10-4 cts s-1cm-2keV-1 HED lt 3?10-4 cts s-1cm-2keV-1 LED
On-axis sensitivity 10-14c.g.s.(0.5 µCrab), 10-40 keV band, 3s, 1Ms,
Line sensitivity at 68 keV lt 3 ?10-7 ph cm-2 s-1 (3s, 1Ms)
Angular resolution 20(HPD), E lt 30 keV 40(HPD) _at_ E 60 keV (goal)
Spectral resolution E/?E 40-50 at 6-10 keV E/?E 50 at 68 keV (goal)
Absolute timing accuracy 100 µs (50 µs goal)
Absolute pointing reconstruction 3? (radius, 90) (2 goal)
Mission duration 3 years including commissioning and calibrations (2 years of scientific program) provision for a possible 2 year extension
Total number of pointings gt 1000 (first 3 years, nominal mission) 500 (during the possible 2 year mission extension)
21Simbol-X core scientific objectives
- Black hole physics and census
- resolve at least 50 of the CXB in the energy
range where it peaks (20 -30 keV) - solve the puzzle on the origin of the hard Xray
emission from the Galactic centre - constrain the physics of the accretion flow onto
both SMBH and solar mass BH
- Particle acceleration mechanisms
- constrain acceleration processes in
relativistic Jets of blazars and GRB - probe
acceleration mechanisms in the strong EM and
gravitational fields of pulsars - measure the
maximum energy of electron acceleration in
supernova remnants shocks
These two broad topics define the core scientific
objectives of Simbol-X
22Simbol-X core scientific objectives
- Black hole physics and census
- resolve at least 50 of the CXB in the energy
range where it peaks (20 -30 keV) - solve the puzzle on the origin of the hard Xray
emission from the Galactic centre - constrain the physics of the accretion flow onto
both SMBH and solar mass BH
- Particle acceleration mechanisms
- constrain acceleration processes in
relativistic Jets of blazars and GRB - probe
acceleration mechanisms in the strong EM and
gravitational fields of pulsars - measure the
maximum energy of electron acceleration in
supernova remnants shocks
These two broad topics define the core scientific
objectives of Simbol-X
23Implementation Challenges
- Image quality large FOV ? 15 HPD 12 FWHM
-
- High throughput ? 0.3 1 ? 103 cm2 _at_30keV
- Low internal background Rejection of CXB from
outside the FOV - Wide energy response (0.5 80 keV) with high
spectroscopic performances
24Multilayer coated Ni mirror shells tested at
Panter
See S. Romaine et al., SPIE Proc., 5900 (2005)
- N.B. a collaboration SAO/NASA-MSFC/INAF-OAB
25The Simbol-X focal plane assembly
- Spectro-imaging system 0.5-100 keV, fast reading
- Full size 8x8 cm2, 128x128 pixels of 625 mm
- Operation at -40C
26Simbol-X Optics
- Heritage from XMMNewton nickel shells obtained
by electroforming replication method low mass
obtained via a reduced thickness of shells
- Coating multi-layer Pt/C needed for requirement
on large FOV and on sensitivity up to gt 80 keV
Focal length 20 m Shell diameters 30 to 70
cm Shell thickness 0.2 to 0.6 mm Number of
shells 100
N.B. I The optics module will have both sides
covered with thermal blankets
N.B. II a proton diverter will be implemented
27Expected Flux Sensitivity
28Angular resolution for past future Hard X-ray
Experiments
Experiment Year Imaging technique Angular resolution
SAX-PDS 1996 Rocking collimator gt 3600 arcsec (collimator pitch)
INTEGRAL-IBIS 2002 Coded mask 720 arcsec (mask pitch)
HEFT (baloon) 2005 Multilayer optics gt 90 arcsec HEW
NEXT 2013? Multilayer Optics 90-60 arcsec HEW
SIMBOL-X 2013 Multilayer Optics 15-20 arcsec HEW
29Wide Field Polynomial optics
R. Giacconi, AN EDUCATION IN ASTRONOMY, Annu.
Rev. Astro. Astrophys. 2005.43 1- 30, 22
A further extension of this line of thinking is
that experiments could be designed by modelling
both the hardware and software as part of the
initial design. I myself, together with Richard
Burg and Chris Burrows, used this approach in
designing in the 1980s what I believe was one of
the best experiments I ever conceived. The
purpose was to scan the sky and to detect distant
clusters of galaxies through their X-ray
emission. The idea was that it would be possible
to equal or exceed the sensitivity of Chandra
with an X-ray telescope of one tenth the area
(and cost). This could be achieved by dedicating
an entire mission of a small satellite to this
purpose and by designing a telescope that would
have a gt16-fold increase of the field of view
with respect to Chandra. ..
30X-ray optics with polynomial profile
- Mirrors are usually built in the Wolter I
(paraboloid-hyperboloid) configuration which
provides, in principle, perfect on-axis images. - This design exhibits no spherical aberration
on-axis but suffers from field curvature, coma
and astigmatism, which make the angular
resolution to degrade rapidly with increasing
off-axis angles. - More general mirror designs than Wolter's exist
in which the primary and secondary mirror
surfaces are expanded as a power series, and the
height-to-focal-length ratio optimized - These polynomial solutions are well suited for
optimization purposes, which may be used to
increase the angular resolution at large off-axis
positions, degrading the on-axis performances
(Burrows, Burgh and Giacconi 1992) - A trade-off of the whole optics assembly of a
wide-field telescope can further on increase the
imaging capabilities off-axis of wide-field
polynomial optics
31WFXT (ASI Phase A study)
Tests _at_ Panter-MPE Marshall XRF
WFXT (epoxy replication on carrier in SiC) Ø
60 cm Focal Length 300 cm HEW 10 arcsec
Ref. O. Citterio, et al., , SPIE Proc., 3766,
198 (1999).
32EDGE-WFI concept (I)
33EDGE-WFI concept (II)
34EDGE-WFI concept (II)
Flux Sensitivity (0.5 2 keV) 1.5 10-16 cgs in
1 Msec
35Geometric Area and Angular resolution for past
and future X-ray telescopes
36XEUS
(3 x10-18) _at_ 0.28 keV 4s
Sensitivity (cgs)
Effective Area
Angular Resolution
- 1 (1.5) m2 _at_ 0.2 keV
- 5 m2 _at_ 1 keV
- 2 m2 _at_ 7 keV
- 1 m2 _at_ 10 keV
- (0.1) m2 _at_ 30 keV
5 (2) arcsec _at_ lt 10 keV 10 arcsec _at_ 40 keV
Field-of-View
7 (10) arcmin diameter WFI, HXI 1.7 arcmin
diameter NFI
37XEUS Effective Area
38XEUS Optics Parameters
- Aperture radii 0.672.1 m
- Grazing reflection angles 0.270.86 deg
- Focal length 35 m
- Plate scale 170µm/arcsec
- Total mirror weight 1.3 tons
Optics error Budget Specifications (arcsec)
Inherent Intrinsic Extrinsic Environment
Total Goal 1.4 1.2 0.5
0.5 2.0 Req. 1.8
3.7 2.0 2.0
5.0
39X-ray Pore Optics System
Double-Cone approximation
N.B.concept introduced by D. Willingale et al,
Capri 1994
40Pore Optics technology
Credits ESA Cosine
41Cellular solids light weight structures with a
very high stiffness
Foamed
Regular cellular structures
42Preliminary imaging tests onto two-reflection
optics (I)
Credits ESA, Cosine, MPE
Collon et al, SPIE Proc 67898, in press (2007)
43Preliminary imaging tests onto two-reflection
optics (II)
Extrapolated HEW for the 4 the first four plates
and the entire stack width (1.2 cm2) of 17
arcsec HEW (BUT JUST IN ONE DIRECTION!)
Creditd Cosine ESA
Extrapolated performance of XOU-3 taking into
account beam spreading At 25 m distance (A) the
azimuthal focussing becomes visible and results
in a focus at 50 m distance (B). The HEW
calculated for the image B (plates 1-4, all 60
pores) is 17 without any corrections
Collon et al, SPIE Proc 67898, in press (2007)
44Alternative approach hot sluping of thin glass
segments
0.4 mm thick segment (without integration) HEW
5 arcsec
45Segment production sequence _at_ INAF-OAB
Ghigo et al, 2006
46Slumping tests on Borofloat33 glass sheets
The use of a vacuum muffle with the capability to
apply on the glass a uniform controlled pressure
(150 g/cm2) provided the best results so far.
The muffle protect the glass from the dust of the
oven and the vacuum avoid the convection of air
slumping (l/11 on 80 mm 50 nm rms) (l/2.9 on 130
mm)
No dust specks Circular fringes very sharp up to
the edge of the glass
150 mm Zerodur K20 mould
47SIMBOL-X