Title :
Design and tests of the hard X-ray polarimeter X-Calibur
Author :
Beilicke, Matthias ; Cowsik, R. ; Dowkontt, P. ; Guo, Qinglai ; Kislat, F. ; Krawczynski, H. ; Barthelmy, S. ; Okajima, Takaharu ; Mitchell, J.W. ; Schnittman, J. ; Zeiger, B. ; De Geronimo, G. ; Baring, M.G. ; Bodaghee, A. ; Miyazawa, Takaya
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Washington Univ. in St.Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract :
X-ray polarimetry promises to give qualitatively new information about high-energy astrophysical sources, such as binary black hole systems, micro-quasars, active galactic nuclei, and gamma-ray bursts. We designed, built and tested a hard X-ray polarimeter, X-Calibur, to be used in the focal plane of the balloon-borne InFOCuS grazing incidence hard X-ray telescope. X-Calibur combines a low-Z Compton scatterer with a CZT detector assembly to measure the polarization of 20-60 keV X-rays making use of the fact that polarized photons Compton scatter preferentially perpendicular to the electric field orientation. The X-Calibur detector assembly is completed, tested, and calibrated; a first flight is scheduled from Ft. Sumner, NM, in fall 2014. In principal, a similar space-borne experiment could be operated in the 5-100 keV regime. X-Calibur achieves a high detection efficiency of order unity.
Keywords :
Compton effect; X-ray apparatus; X-ray detection; X-ray optics; X-ray scattering; assembling; cadmium compounds; focal planes; polarimeters; CZT detector assembly; CdZnTe; X-ray polarimetry; active galactic nuclei; balloon-borne InFOCuS grazing incidence; binary black hole system; electron volt energy 5 keV to 100 keV; focal plane; gamma-ray burst; hard X-ray polarimeter X-Calibur; hard X-ray telescope; high-energy astrophysical source; low-Z Compton scatterer; microquasar; polarization measurement; polarized photons Compton scatter; space-borne experiment; Lead; Polarimetry;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2014 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-5582-4
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2014.6836274