ABSTRACT
We present an analytical method for the design of narrow-band X-ray multilayer coatings having greatly reduced reflected side-lobe intensity, for the realization of X-ray mirrors that have improved spectral purity. The method uses a specific variation of the individual layer thicknesses as a function of depth in the multilayer stack, derived from Laplace transform analysis of the multilayer's reflectance profile. The design process and mathematical foundations are outlined. Pt/C multilayers with 5 nm d-spacing for hard X-rays are designed, fabricated and measured to demonstrate the validity and effectiveness of the method are presented. As an extrapolation, three additional side lobe suppressed multilayers for soft X-rays and EUVs are also designed and investigated: 1) Cr/Sc multilayer for soft X-rays (4.96 nm wavelength) at high grazing angle (30°), 2) Mo/Si multilayer for EUV (13.5 nm wavelength) at normal incidence angle and 3) SiC/Mg multilayer for EUV (30.4 nm wavelength) at normal incidence angle. The calculated reflectances demonstrate that the presented method is robust for the energy range from X-rays to EUVs.
ABSTRACT
The new Japanese x-ray astronomy satellite, ASTRO-H, will carry two identical hard x-ray telescopes (HXTs), which cover the energy range of 5 to 80 keV. The HXT mirrors employ tightly nested, conically approximated thin-foil Wolter-I optics, and the mirror surfaces are coated with Pt/C depth-graded multilayers to enhance the hard x-ray effective area by means of Bragg reflection. The HXT comprises foils 120-450 mm in diameter and 200 mm in length, with a focal length of 12 m. To obtain a large effective area, 213 aluminum foils 0.2 mm in thickness are tightly nested confocally. The requirements for HXT are a total effective area of >300 cm2 at 30 keV and an angular resolution of <1.7' in half-power diameter (HPD). Fabrication of two HXTs has been completed, and the x-ray performance of each HXT was measured at a synchrotron radiation facility, SPring-8 BL20B2 in Japan. Angular resolutions (HPD) of 1.9' and 1.8' at 30 keV were obtained for the full telescopes of HXT-1 and HXT-2, respectively. The total effective area of the two HXTs at 30 keV is 349 cm2.
Subject(s)
Lenses , Spacecraft/instrumentation , Telescopes , X-Ray Diffraction/instrumentation , Computer-Aided Design , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure AnalysisABSTRACT
We present an analytical study to provide guide lines to design a block structure hard X-ray supermirror. The block structure supermirror is a kind of layered structure consisting of several "blocks" of multilayer of different d-spacing to obtain broad energy bandwidth response. This structure has been widely applied in X-ray telescopes because it is easy to fabricate. To examine the propagation of X-rays in a supermirror structure, further simplified approximation of Kozhevnikov's theory has been developed. The supermirror structure is described by a structure function. The spectral function of the structure, which is the Laplace transformation of the structure function, turns out to be proportional to the reflectivity profile against X-ray energy. By analyzing the expression of the spectral function, we found the reflectivity of the supermirror could be smooth due to the box-car shaped spectral function if the d-spacing and layer number of each block is arranged with appropriate constraints.
Subject(s)
Computer-Aided Design , Lenses , Models, Theoretical , Scattering, Radiation , X-Rays , Computer Simulation , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure AnalysisABSTRACT
We present our design and fabrication scheme of a supermirror for hard x-ray telescopes to improve the performance of reflection. Supermirrors are designed to achieve target reflectivity profiles with small ripples in the interesting energy range with a limited number of layer pairs. Starting from conventional design methods, we optimized the thickness distribution of the structure using a numerical approach with the merit function established for this application. As an example, a platinum-carbon supermirror structure of 123 layer pairs with a varying d-space of 2-6 nm was designed to enhance the reflectivity in the energy range from 11 to 55 keV with a flat top at a grazing angle of 0.28 deg. The multilayer thus designed was deposited on a float glass by our DC magnetron sputtering system. The reflectivity profile was successfully measured to be ~20% with little oscillation in all energy band of interest.
ABSTRACT
We present a detailed study of the performance of the Astro-E x-ray telescope (XRT) onboard the Astro-E satellite. As described in preceding papers the ground-based calibrations of the Astro-E XRT revealed that its image quality and effective area are somewhat worse than that expected from the original design. Conceivable causes for such performance degradation are examined by x-ray and optical microscopic measurements at various levels, such as individual reflectors, sectors, and quadrants of the XRT and their alignments. We can attribute, based on detailed measurements, the degradation of the image quality to a slope error in the individual reflectors and the positioning error of reflectors. As for the deficit of the effective area, the shadowing of x rays within the XRT body is the dominant factor. Error budgets for the performance degradation of the Astro-E XRT are summarized. The ray-tracing simulator, which is needed to construct the response function for arbitrary off-axis angles and spatial distributions of any celestial x-ray sources, has been developed and tuned based on the results of detailed measurements. The ray-tracing simulation provides results that are consistent within 3% with the real measurement except for large off-axis angles and higher energies. We propose, based on knowledge obtained from all the measurements and simulations, several plans for future developments to improve the performance of the nested thin-foil mirrors.
ABSTRACT
The International Focusing Optics Collaboration for microCrab Sensitivity (InFOCmicroS) balloonborne hard x-ray telescope incorporates graded Pt/C multilayers replicated onto segmented Al foils to obtain the significant effective area at energies previously inaccessible to x-ray optics. Reflectivity measurements of individual foils demonstrate our capability to produce a mass quantity of multilayered foils with a rms roughness of 0.5 nm. The effective area of the completed mirror is 78 and 22 cm2 at 20 and 40 keV, respectively. The measured half-power diameter is 2.0 +/- 0.6 are min (90% confidence). The successful completion of this mirror demonstrates its applicability to future x-ray telescopes such as Constellation-X.
ABSTRACT
A hard-x-ray telescope is successfully produced for balloon observations by making use of depth-graded multilayers, or so-called supermirrors, with platinum-carbon (Pt/C) layer pairs. It consists of four quadrant units assembled in an optical configuration with a diameter of 40 cm and a focal length of 8 m. Each quadrant is made of 510 pieces of coaxially and confocally aligned supermirrors that significantly enhance the sensitivity in an energy range of 20-40 keV. The configuration of the telescope is similar to the x-ray telescope onboard Astro-E, but with a longer focal length. The reflectivity of supermirrors is of the order of 40% in the energy range concerned at a grazing angle of 0.2 deg. The effective area of a fully assembled telescope is 50 cm2 at 30 keV. The angular resolution is 2.37 arc min at half-power diameter 8.0 keV. The field of view is 12.6 arc min in the hard-x-ray region, depending somewhat on x-ray energies. We discuss these characteristics, taking into account the figure errors of reflectors and their optical alignment in the telescope assembly. This hard-x-ray telescope is unanimously afforded in the International Focusing Optics Collaboration for muCrab Sensitivity balloon experiment.