Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

In-orbit performance and calibration of the Hard X-ray Imager onboard Hitomi (ASTRO-H)

Kouichi Hagino, Kazuhiro Nakazawa, Goro Sato, M. Kokubun, Teruaki Enoto, Yasushi Fukazawa, Katsuhiro Hayashi, J. Kataoka, J. Katsuta, Shogo Kobayashi, Philippe Laurent, F. Lebrun, Olivier Limousin, Daniel Maier, Kazuo Makishima, Taketo Mimura, Katsuma Miyake, Tsunefumi Mizuno, Kunishiro Mori, Hiroaki Murakami, Takeshi Nakamori, Toshio Nakano, Hirofumi Noda, Hirokazu Odaka, M. Ohno, Masayuki Ohta, Shinya Saito, Rie Sato, H. Tajima, H. Takahashi, Tadayuki Takahashi, Shin׳ichiro Takeda, Takaaki Tanaka, Y. Terada, Hideki Uchiyama, Y. Uchiyama, Shin Watanabe, K. Yamaoka, Yoichi Yatsu, Takayuki Yuasa

Journal of Astronomical Telescopes Instruments and Systems · 2018

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Summary

The Hard X-ray Imager (HXI) onboard Hitomi (ASTRO-H) is an imaging spectrometer covering hard x-ray energies of 5 to 80 keV. Combined with the Hard X-ray Telescope, it enables imaging spectroscopy with an angular resolution of 1′.7 half-power diameter, in a field of view of 9′ × 9′. The main imager is composed of four layers of Si detectors and one layer of CdTe detector, stacked to cover a wide energy band up to 80 keV, surrounded by an active shield made of Bi4Ge3O12 scintillator to reduce the background. The HXI started observations 12 days before the Hitomi loss and successfully obtained data from G21.5–0.9, Crab, and blank sky. Utilizing these data, we calibrate the detector response and study properties of in-orbit background. The observed Crab spectra agree well with a powerlaw mode

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1117/1.jatis.4.2.021409
Catalogue ID
SNmoic25z7-4lyids
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