1 October 1991 Transmission grating spectroscopy and the Advanced X-Ray Astrophysics Facility
Mark L. Schattenburg, Claude R. Canizares, Daniel Dewey, Kathryn A. Flanagan, Margaret A. Hamnett, Alan M. Levine, Kenneth S. K. Lum, Ramanujam Manikkalingam, Thomas H. Markert, Henry I. Smith
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The use of transmission gratings with grazing-incidence telescopes in celestial x-ray astronomy is reviewed. The basic properties of transmission grating spectrometers and the use of "phased" gratings to enhance the diffraction efficiency are outlined. Special attention is given to the AXAF high-energy transmission grating (HETG) being fabricated at MIT. The HETG operates over the range 0.4 to 8 keV, gives resolving powers of 100 to 1000, effective areas of 10 to 300 cm2, and a minimum detectable line flux of 1 to 10 x 10-6 photons cm-2 s-1. The instrument consists of a single array with two types of membrane-supported grating facets: medium-energy gratings (0.6-μm period, 0.5-μm-thick silver) mounted behind the outer three AXAF mirrors, and high-energy gratings (0.2-μm period, 1.0-μm-thick gold) mounted behind the inner three mirrors. The materials and thicknesses are selected to maximize efficiency throughout the energy band. The facets are fabricated at MIT using a process involving x-ray lithography. AXAF will also carry a low-energy transmission grating (LETG) supplied by the Laboratory for Space Research at Utrecht. It uses mesh-supported grating facets of 1.0-μm period and is optimized for operation down to 80 eV. Gratings are most effective for the study of point sources, but they also give moderate resolution spectra of slightly extended sources and can be used to map the spatial distribution of line-emitting regions.
Mark L. Schattenburg, Claude R. Canizares, Daniel Dewey, Kathryn A. Flanagan, Margaret A. Hamnett, Alan M. Levine, Kenneth S. K. Lum, Ramanujam Manikkalingam, Thomas H. Markert, and Henry I. Smith "Transmission grating spectroscopy and the Advanced X-Ray Astrophysics Facility," Optical Engineering 30(10), (1 October 1991). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.55976
Published: 1 October 1991
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Cited by 38 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Photomasks

X-rays

Diffraction gratings

Gold

Sensors

Spectral resolution

Spectrometers

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