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Grazing incidence optics for X-ray astronomy X-ray optics
| Content Provider | Semantic Scholar |
|---|---|
| Author | Singh, Kulinder Pal |
| Copyright Year | 2011 |
| Abstract | Cosmic X-ray sources are usually very weak and their detection, therefore, needs large area telescopes to gather light and sensitive detectors to enhance quantum efficiency. Conventional telescopes for visible light use refracting or reflective optics which is impractical for X-ray wavelengths because photon energies are greater than the binding energies of the typical atomic electrons leading to a refractive index for Xrays being less than unity. Thus single surface reflectivity for near-normal incidence is negligible for X-rays. However, by Snell’s Laws, total external reflection occurs and X-rays can be reflected from a surface up to a critical angle (usually about a degree for energies below 10 keV) given by cosine θ = n. This is known as the grazing angle. X-ray telescopes are made to exploit the grazing incidence from a set of co-axial and confocal shells of paraboloidal and hyperboloidal mirThe paper was based on presentation at XXXV OSI symposium held at Thiruvananthapuram during 16–18 January 2011. K. P. Singh (B) Dept. of Astron. & Astrophys., Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Homi Bhabha Road, Mumbai 400005, India e-mail: singh@tifr.res.in rors. X-ray reflectors having high atomic number surfaces with low scattering are used to realize imaging capability for a telescope. I describe here various configurations required, and the various technologies used and their limitations, to make practical X-ray telescopes. A soft X-ray imaging telescope (SXT) using grazing incidence has been built at TIFR for ASTROSAT—an Indian Multiwavelength Satellite designed to cover a very broad band of X-rays, UV and optical. Astrosat is planned to be launched by a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle in 2012 into a near-Earth Equatorial orbit. I will also describe the ongoing R&D for realizing telescopes for hard X-rays above 10 keV useful for both Astronomy and medical diagnostics. |
| File Format | PDF HTM / HTML |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | http://www.tifr.res.in/~astrosat_sxt/page2/2011JOptics_kps_Xoptics.pdf |
| Language | English |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |