The x-ray polarization of compact objects in x-ray binaries allows us to understand the complex spacetimes surrounding these sources. XL-Calibur is a state-of-the-art, balloon-borne telescope that measures the linear polarization of stellar-mass black holes, neutron stars, and nebulae in the 15-80 keV energy band. The selected energy range allows for observing coronal emission from black holes while also enabling us to narrow down on emission models from neutron stars, pulsars, and magnetars. Early in 2024, XL-Calibur will be launched from Kiruna, Sweden for approximately 10 days to observe Cyg X-1 and Cyg X-3, or other sources chosen based on flux levels at the time of flight. Observations might be coordinated with the recently launched Imaging x-ray Polarimetry Explorer mission which measures polarization in the complimentary 2-8 keV band. Combined XL-Calibur and IXPE observations will yield information on both soft and hard x-rays allowing us to decompose the total emission from black holes into thermal disk and coronal. We discuss the characterization of the XL-Calibur CdZnTe detectors, the telescope mirror and truss setup, and preliminary results from our most recent flight.
The new generation of x-ray and gamma-ray detectors employ cryogenic detectors known as transition-edge sensors (TES) due to their high energy resolution and photon detection rates. These detectors require a refrigeration module that can operate at the transition temperature of the TES’s superconducting film—usually at mK temperatures. DR-TES consists of a novel mini-dilution refrigerator (DR) from Chase Research Cryogenics that can be used in balloon-borne missions to cool detectors to temperatures between 10 to 100mK. To test the viability of this DR module, we will be cooling down a SLEDGEHAMMER detector fabricated by the National Institute of Standards and Technology quantum sensor group. The SLEDGEHAMMER microcalorimeter uses TESs coupled to superconducting quantum interference devices which are in turn coupled to microwave resonators to detect x-rays and gamma-rays. We plan to fly the SLEDGEHAMMER detector cooled by the mini-DR on a stratospheric balloon flight in August of 2024 at Fort Sumner, NM. As a follow-up mission, 511-CAM will use a modified version of the detector to map the 511keV emission from the galactic center region.
X-ray polarization measurements can provide unique information that is complementary to that obtained through spectroscopic or imaging observations. However, there have been few cases where significant x-ray polarization has been observed. XL-Calibur, conducted in collaboration between Japan, the United States of America, and Sweden, is a balloon-borne mission that aims to conduct high-sensitivity polarimetric observations in the hard x-ray band from 15 to 80 keV. The Japanese group is in charge of developing the Hard X-ray Telescope (HXT) with high light-gathering power. Optical adjustments were completed in 2020, and the performance of the HXT was measured in June 2021 at the SPring-8 (synchrotron radiation facility in Hyogo, Japan). Subsequently, in July 2022, the first observation was conducted from Sweden to Canada. After the flight, the HXT was recovered, and we measured its performance again. By comparing the HXT performances before and after the flight, we found no significant changes that can affect the second flight scheduled in 2024.
The 511 keV γ-ray emission from the galactic center region may fully or partially originate from the annihilation of positrons from dark matter particles with electrons from the interstellar medium. Alternatively, the positrons could be created by astrophysical sources, involving exclusively standard model physics. We describe here a new concept for a 511 keV mission called 511-CAM (511 keV gamma-ray camera using microcalorimeters) that combines focusing γ-ray optics with a stack of transition edge sensor microcalorimeter arrays in the focal plane. The 511-CAM detector assembly has a projected 511 keV energy resolution of 390 eV full width half maximum or better, and improves by a factor of at least 11 on the performance of state-of-the-art Ge-based Compton telescopes. Combining this unprecedented energy resolution with sub-arcmin angular resolutions afforded by Laue lens or channeling optics could make substantial contributions toward identifying the origin of the 511 keV emission through discovering and characterizing point sources and measuring line-of-sight velocities of the emitting plasmas.
XL-Calibur is a balloon-borne mission for hard x-ray polarimetry. The first launch is currently scheduled from Sweden in summer 2022. Japanese collaborators provide a hard x-ray telescope to the mission. The telescope’s design is identical to the Hard X-ray Telescope (HXT, conically-approximated Wolter-I optics) on board ASTROH with the same focal length of 12 m and the aperture of 45 cm, which can focus x-rays up to 80 keV. The telescope is divided into three segments in the circumferential direction, and confocal 213 grazing-incidence mirrors are precisely placed in the primary and secondary sections of each segment. The surfaces of the mirrors are coated with Pt/C depth-graded multilayer to reflect hard x-rays efficiently by the Bragg reflection. To achieve the best focus, optical adjustment of all of the segments was performed at the SPring-8/BL20B2 synchrotron radiation facility during 2020. A final performance evaluation was conducted in June 2021 and the experiment yields the effective area of 175 cm2 and 73 cm2 at 30 keV and 50 keV, respectively, with its half-power diameter of the point spread function as 2.1 arcmin. The field of view, defined as the full width of the half-maximum of the vignetting curve, is 5.9 arcmin.
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is the major ground-based gamma-ray observatory under construction. The CTA South observatory is foreseen to consist of Large-, Medium-, and Small-sized imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes (IACTs). The innovative Schwarzschild-Couder Telescope (SCT) is a candidate IACT and a proposed major U.S. contribution for the Medium-sized, 10m aperture telescopes for CTA. The SCT is designed to simultaneously achieve 8 degrees field of view and high imaging resolution with unprecedented 11,328 pixels camera by implementing novel, aplanatic, segmented dual-mirror optics and compact silicon photomultiplier detectors. This presentation will provide an overview of the SCT program in the U.S. including the construction of a full-scale prototype instrument by an international consortium of scientists with the focus on the alignment of the segmented primary and secondary mirrors and the ongoing upgrade of the camera to full scale.
The prototype Schwarzschild-Couder Telescope (pSCT) is a candidate for a medium-sized telescope in the Cherenkov Telescope Array. The pSCT is based on a dual-mirror optics design that reduces the plate scale and allows for the use of silicon photomultipliers as photodetectors. The prototype pSCT camera currently has only the central sector instrumented with 25 camera modules (1600 pixels), providing a 2.68-deg field of view (FoV). The camera electronics are based on custom TARGET (TeV array readout with GSa/s sampling and event trigger) application-specific integrated circuits. Field programmable gate arrays sample incoming signals at a gigasample per second. A single backplane provides camera-wide triggers. An upgrade of the pSCT camera that will fully populate the focal plane is in progress. This will increase the number of pixels to 11,328, the number of backplanes to 9, and the FoV to 8.04 deg. Here, we give a detailed description of the pSCT camera, including the basic concept, mechanical design, detectors, electronics, current status, and first light.
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is the next-generation ground-based observatory for very-high-energy gamma rays. One candidate design for CTA's medium-sized telescopes consists of the Schwarzschild-Couder Telescope (SCT), featuring innovative dual-mirror optics. The SCT project has built and is currently operating a 9.7-m prototype SCT (pSCT) at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory (FLWO); such optical design enables the use of a compact camera with state-of-the art silicon photomultiplier detectors. A partially-equipped camera has recently successfully detected the Crab Nebula with a statistical significance of 8.6 standard deviations. A funded upgrade of the pSCT focal plane sensors and electronics is currently ongoing, which will bring the total number of channels from 1600 to 11328 and the telescope field of view from about 2.7° to 8° . In this work, we will describe the technical and scientific performance of the pSCT.
This paper introduces a second-generation balloon-borne hard X-ray polarimetry mission, XL-Calibur. X-ray polarimetry promises to give qualitatively new information about high-energy astrophysical sources, such as pulsars and binary black hole systems. The XL-Calibur contains a grazing incidence X-ray telescope with a focal plane detector unit that is sensitive to linear polarization. The telescope is very similar in design to the ASTRO-H HXT telescopes that has the world’s largest effective area above ~10 keV. The detector unit combines a low atomic number Compton scatterer with a CdZnTe detector assembly to measure the polarization making use of the fact that polarized photons Compton scatter preferentially perpendicular to the electric field orientation. It also contains a CdZnTe imager at the bottom. The detector assembly is surrounded by the improved anti-coincidence shielding, giving a better sensitivity. The pointing system with arcsecond accuracy will be achieved.
XL-Calibur is a balloon-borne hard X-ray polarimetry mission, the first flight of which is currently foreseen for 2021. XL-Calibur carries an X-ray telescope consists of consists of 213 Wolter I grazing-incidence mirrors which are nested in a coaxial and cofocal configuration. The optics design is nearly identical to the Hard X-ray Telescope (HXT) on board the ASTRO-H satellite. The telescope was originally fabricated for the Formation Flying Astronomical Survey Telescope (FFAST) project. However, the telescope can be used for XL-Calibur, since the FFAST project was terminated before completion. The mirror surfaces are coated with Pt/C depth-graded multilayers to reflect hard X-rays above 10 keV by Bragg reflection. The effective area of the telescope is larger than 300 cm^2 at 30 keV. The mirrors are supported by alignment bars in the housing, and each of the bars has a series of 213 grooves to hold the mirrors. To obtain the best focus of the optics, the positions of the mirrors have to be adjusted by tuning the positions of the alignment bars. The tuning of the mirror positions is conducted using the X-ray beam at the synchrotron facility SPring-8 BL20B2, and this process is called optical tuning. First the positions of the second reflectors are tuned, and then those of the first reflectors are tuned. We did the first optical tuning in Jan 2020. The second tuning will be planned between April to July, 2020. This paper reports the current status of the hard X-ray telescope for XL-Calibur.
The novel 9.7m Schwarzschild-Couder Telescope (SCT), utilizing aspheric dual-mirror optical system, has been constructed as a prototype medium size x-ray telescope for the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) observatory. The prototype SCT (pSCT) is designed to achieve simultaneously the wide (≥ 8°) field of view and the superior imaging resolution (0.067 per pixel) to significantly improve scientific capabilities of the observatory in conducting the sky surveys, the follow-up observations of multi-messenger transients with poorly known initial localization and the morphology studies of x-ray sources with angular extent. In this submission, we describe the hardware and software implementations of the telescope optical system as well as the methods specifically developed to align its complex optical system, in which both primary and secondary mirrors are segmented. The pSCT has detected Crab Nebula in June 2020 during ongoing commissioning, which was delayed due to worldwide pandemic and is not yet completed. Verification of pSCT performance is continuing and further improvement of optical alignment is anticipated.
For the first time in the history of ground-based y-ray astronomy, the on-axis performance of the dual mirror, aspheric, aplanatic Schwarzschild-Couder optical system has been demonstrated in a 9:7-m aperture imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescope. The novel design of the prototype Schwarzschild-Couder Telescope (pSCT) is motivated by the need of the next-generation Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) observatory to have the ability to perform wide (≥8°) field-of-view observations simultaneously with superior imaging of atmospheric cascades (resolution of 0:067 per pixel or better). The pSCT design, if implemented in the CTA installation, has the potential to improve significantly both the x-ray angular resolution and the off-axis sensitivity of the observatory, reaching nearly the theoretical limit of the technique and thereby making a major impact on the CTA observatory sky survey programs, follow-up observations of multi-messenger transients with poorly known initial localization, as well as on the spatially resolved spectroscopic studies of extended x-ray sources. This contribution reports on the initial alignment procedures and point-spread-function results for the challenging segmented aspheric primary and secondary mirrors of the pSCT.
The first prototype of the Schwarzschild Couder Medium Size Telescope (pSCT) proposed for the CTA observatory has been installed in 2018 at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory. The pSCT camera is composed of 25 modules with 64 channels each, covering only a small portion of the full focal plane of the telescope. The Italian Institute of Nuclear Physics (INFN) has developed and characterized in collaboration with Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK) a new generation of Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPMs) sensitive to the Near Ultraviolet wavelengths, based on the High Density technology (NUV-HD devices). The latest generation of 6×6 mm2 SiPMs (called NUV-HD3) have been used to equip a subsection of 9 out of 25 modules of the pSCT camera. An upgrade of this camera is foreseen between 2019 and 2020 using the same sensors, aiming to equip the full focal plane with 177 modules, for a total of more than 11000 pixels. We will present a full characterization of the performance of these devices, highlighting why they are suitable for Cherenkov light detection. An overview on the overall behavior of the installed sensors will be also given, providing information on the uniformity of the sensors and of the performance of the camera.
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