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Development of the HXD-II wide-band all-sky monitor onboard Astro-E2
86
Citations
19
References
2005
Year
EngineeringSpace OpticElectromagnetic CompatibilityX-ray ImagingAstronomical Coordinate SystemX-ray TechnologyRadiation ImagingHealth SciencesPhotometryRadiation DetectionPhysicsBgo ShieldsRadiation TransportRadio TelescopeSynchrotron RadiationSpace WeatherAstrophysicsHard X-ray DetectorThick Bgo CrystalsX-ray Optic
The hard X-ray detector (HXD-II) is one of the three scientific instruments onboard Japanese X-ray astronomy satellite Astro-E2 scheduled to be launched in 2005. This mission is very unique in a point of having a lower background than any other past missions in the 10-600 keV range. In the HXD-II, the large and thick BGO crystals are used as active shields for particle and gamma-ray background to the main detector. They have a wide field of view of ~2pi and a large effective area of 400 cm <sup xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">2</sup> even at 1 MeV. Hence, the BGO shields have been developed as a wide-band all-sky monitor (WAM) with a broadband coverage of 50-5000 keV. In this paper, overall design and performance of the HXD-II/WAM based on the results of preflight calibration tests carried out in June 2004 are described. By irradiating various radio isotopes with the WAM flight model, we verified that it had comparable capabilities with other gamma-ray burst detectors
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