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Simulating the optical performances of the ATHENA x-ray telescope optics
Author(s) -
Daniele Spiga,
G. Sironi,
Desirée Della Monica Ferreira,
Ivo Ferreira,
Marcos Bavdaz,
Erik Knudsen,
Giovanni Bianucci,
Finn E. Christensen,
Maximilien J. Collon,
P. Conconi,
Fábio Marioni,
Giovanni Pareschi,
Arne S. Jegers,
Bianca Salmaso,
Brian Shortt,
G. Tagliaferri,
Giuseppe Vacanti,
Giuseppe Valsecchi,
N. J. Westergaard,
Eric Wille,
Sonny Massahi
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
space telescopes and instrumentation 2022: ultraviolet to gamma ray
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1117/12.2315019
Subject(s) - telescope , optics , physics , x ray optics , geometrical optics , x ray telescope , astronomy , x ray , computer science
The ATHENA (Advanced Telescope for High Energy Astrophysics) X-ray observatory is an ESA-selected L2 class mission. In the proposed configuration, the optical assembly has a diameter of 2.2 m with an effective area of 1.4 m2 at 1 keV, 0.25 m2 at 6 keV, and requires an angular resolution of 5 arcsec. To meet the requirements of effective area and angular resolution, the technology of Silicon Pore Optics (SPO) was selected for the optics implementation. The ATHENA’s optic assembly requires hundreds of SPOs mirror modules (MMs), obtained by stacking wedged and ribbed silicon wafer plates onto silicon mandrels to form the Wolter-I configuration. Different factors can contribute to limit the imaging performances of SPOs, such as i) diffraction through the pore apertures, ii) plate deformations due to fabrication errors and surface roughness, iii) alignment errors among plates in an MM, and iv) co-focality errors within the MMs assembly. In order to determine the fabrication and assembling tolerances, the impact of these contributions needs to be assessed prior to manufacturing. A set of simulation tools responding to this need was developed in the framework of the ESA-financed projects SIMPOSIuM and ASPHEA. In this paper, we present the performance simulation obtained for the recentlyproposed ATHENA configuration in terms of effective area, and we provide a simulation of the diffractive effects in a pair of SPO MMs. Finally, we present an updated sizing of magnetic diverter (a Halbach array) and the magnetic fields levels that can be reached in order to deviate the most energetic protons out of the detector field.

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