A new detection system for X-/Gamma-ray broad energy passband detectors for astronomy has been developed. This system is based on Silicon Drift Detectors (SDDs) coupled with scintillator bars; the SDDs act as a direct detector of soft (<30 keV) X-ray photons, while hard X-/Gamma-rays are stopped by the scintillator bars and the scintillation light is collected by the SDDs. With this configuration, it is possible to build compact, position sensitive detectors with unprecedented energy passband (2 keV – 10/20 MeV). The X and Gamma-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XGIS) on board the THESEUS mission, selected for Phase 0 study for M7, exploits this innovative detection system. The Wide Field Monitor - Imager and Spectrometer (WFM-IS) of the ASTENA (Advanced Surveyor of Transient Events and Nuclear Astrophysics) mission concept consists of 12 independent detection units, also based on this new technology. For the WFM-IS, a coded mask provides imaging capabilities up to 150 keV, while above this limit the instrument will act as a full sky spectrometer. However, it is possible to extend imaging capabilities above this limit by alternatively exploiting the Compton kinematics reconstruction or by using the information from the relative fluxes measured by the different cameras. In this work, we present the instrument design and results from MEGAlib simulations aimed at evaluating the effective area and the imaging performances of the WFM-IS above 150 keV.
Hard-x/soft gamma-rays are probes of the most powerful phenomena in the universe. Unlike soft x-ray astrophysics, this band has benefited less from the technological advancement due to the difficulty to absorb this radiation and to the lack of focusing instrumentation. For these reasons the quest for innovative soft gamma-ray instrumentation is pressing and their effective recognition and realization are urgent. In this context, and in the framework of the AHEAD project, funded by the European Commission, the ASTENA experiment was proposed as an innovative mission concept to face some of the most debated questions in hard x-/gamma-ray astronomy. This effort will be done through the use of instruments based on groundbreaking technologies, capable of providing unprecedented broad energy passband in a wide field of view, high sensitivity observations and, at the same time, sub-arcminute localization of gamma-ray sources and polarimetric measurement. In this paper we describe the instruments on board ASTENA, the technologies involved, the performances achievable with their exploitation and their level of readiness.
We describe the science case, design and expected performances of the X/Gamma-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XGIS), a GRB and transients monitor developed and studied for the THESEUS mission project, capable of covering an exceptionally wide energy band (2 keV – 10 MeV), with imaging capabilities and location accuracy <15 arcmin up to 150 keV over a Field of View of 2sr, a few hundreds eV energy resolution in the X-ray band (<30 keV) and few micro seconds time resolution over the whole energy band. Thanks to a design based on a modular approach, the XGIS can be easily re-scaled and adapted for fitting the available resources and specific scientific objectives of future high-energy astrophysics missions, and especially those aimed at fully exploiting GRBs and high-energy transients for multi-messenger astrophysics and fundamental physics.
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