English

High-resolution x-ray telescopes

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2015-05-20 v1

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.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1010.4892,
  title  = {High-resolution x-ray telescopes},
  author = {S. L. O'Dell and R. J. Brissenden and W. N. Davis and R. F. Elsner and M. Elvis and M. Freeman and T. Gaetz and P. Gorenstein and M. V. Gubarev and D. Jerius and M. Juda and J. J. Kolodziejczak and S. Murray and R. Petre and W. Podgorski and B. D. Ramsey and P. B. Reid and T. Saha and D. A. Schwartz and S. Trolier-McKinstry and M. C. Weisskopf and R. H. T. Wilke and S. Wolk and W. W. Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1010.4892},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

19 pages, 11 figures, SPIE Conference 7803 "Adaptive X-ray Optics", part of SPIE Optics+Photonics 2010, San Diego CA, 2010 August 2-5

R2 v1 2026-06-21T16:33:11.874Z