Paper
31 October 1996 EPIC system onboard the ESA XMM
Gabriele E. Villa, Anthony F. Abbey, Monique Arnaud, M. Balasini, Giovanni Fabrizio Bignami, Michel Boer, Heinrich W. Braeuninger, I Butler, G. Cafagna, C. Cara, C. Chabaud, Lucio Chiappetti, Richard E. Cole, M. Conte, J. Dowson, Pierre Dhez, R. Duc, Guido Di Cocco, Philippe Ferrando, C. V. Goodall, H. Hippman, Andrew D. Holland, Eckhard Kendziorra, Alain Labeque, Norbert Meidinger, C. Moriggio, Nicola La Palombara, C. Musso, E. Poindron, Giovanni Peres, E. Pferrerman, Claude Pigot, John P. Pye, Claus Reppin, D. Schmitt, Salvatore Sciortino, Salvatore Serio, J. E. Spragg, John Buchan Stephen, Lothar Strueder, Massimo Trifoglio, P. Tua, Martin J. L. Turner, S. Whitehead
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The European photon imaging camera (EPIC) is one of the two main instruments onboard the ESA X-Ray Cornerstone Mission XMM. It is devoted to performing imaging and spectroscopy of the x-ray sky in the domain 0.1 10 keV with a peak sensitivity in 105 seconds of 2 multiplied by 10-15 erg/cm-2. The x-ray instrumentation is complemented by a radiation monitor which will measure the particle background. The spectral resolution is approximately 140 eV at 6.4 keV and 60 eV at 1 keV. The instrumentation consists of three separate focal plane cameras at the focus of the three XMM telescopes, containing CCDs passively cooled to typically minus 100 degrees via radiators pointing toward the anti-Sun direction. The two cameras with the field of view partially occulted by the RGS grating boxes will have MOS technology CCDs while the third camera, with full field of view, will be based on p-n technology. The CCDs in the focal plane of the cameras will cover the entire 30 foot by 30 foot field of view of the telescope while the pixel size (40 by 40 (mu) for the MOS camera and 150 multiplied by 150 (mu) for the p-n) will be adequate to sample the approximately 20' PSF of the mirrors. In order to cope with a wide range of sky background and source luminosity in the visible/UV band, a filter wheel with six positions has been implemented in each camera. The six positions correspond to: open position, closed position, one thin filter (1600 angstrom of plastic support and 400 angstrom of Al), one medium filter (1600 angstrom of plastic support and 800 angstrom of Al) and one thick filter (approximately 3000 angstrom of plastic support, approximately 1000 angstrom of Al and 300 Angstrom of Sn). The final position will be a redundant filter of type still to be decided. A set of radioactive sources in each camera will allow the calibration of the CCDs in any of the operating modes and with any filter wheel position. Vacuum doors and valves operated will allow the operation of other camera heads on the ground, in a vacuum chamber and/or in a controlled atmosphere, and will protect the CCDs from contamination until the spacecraft is safely in orbit. The MOS camera will have 7 CCDs, each of 600 by 600 pixels arranged in a hexagonal pattern with one central and six peripheral. The p-n camera head will have 12 CCDs, each with 200 multiplied by 64 pixels, in a rectangular arrangement, 4 quadrants of 3 CCDs each. The radiation monitor is based on two separate detectors to monitor the low (electrons greater than 30 keV) and the high (electrons greater than 200 keV and protons greater than 10 MeV) energy particles impinging on the telescope along its orbit.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gabriele E. Villa, Anthony F. Abbey, Monique Arnaud, M. Balasini, Giovanni Fabrizio Bignami, Michel Boer, Heinrich W. Braeuninger, I Butler, G. Cafagna, C. Cara, C. Chabaud, Lucio Chiappetti, Richard E. Cole, M. Conte, J. Dowson, Pierre Dhez, R. Duc, Guido Di Cocco, Philippe Ferrando, C. V. Goodall, H. Hippman, Andrew D. Holland, Eckhard Kendziorra, Alain Labeque, Norbert Meidinger, C. Moriggio, Nicola La Palombara, C. Musso, E. Poindron, Giovanni Peres, E. Pferrerman, Claude Pigot, John P. Pye, Claus Reppin, D. Schmitt, Salvatore Sciortino, Salvatore Serio, J. E. Spragg, John Buchan Stephen, Lothar Strueder, Massimo Trifoglio, P. Tua, Martin J. L. Turner, and S. Whitehead "EPIC system onboard the ESA XMM", Proc. SPIE 2808, EUV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Instrumentation for Astronomy VII, (31 October 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.256015
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 17 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Cameras

Charge-coupled devices

Molybdenum

CCD cameras

Electronics

Control systems

Optical filters

RELATED CONTENT

Progress of the x ray CCD camera development for the...
Proceedings of SPIE (September 26 2013)
Cassini imaging science subsystem
Proceedings of SPIE (October 07 1996)
The Dark Universe Observatory (DUO): telescope concept
Proceedings of SPIE (October 11 2004)
Status of the EPIC/MOS calibration onboard XMM-Newton
Proceedings of SPIE (March 11 2003)
UV/visible camera for the Clementine mission
Proceedings of SPIE (June 02 1995)

Back to Top