The MIRAX Hard X-Ray Transient Mission
Abstract
The MIRAX (Monitor e Imageador de Raios X) mission is designed to perform a hard X-ray (5-200 keV) survey of more than half of the sky with high localization power 1') and high sensitivity (26 mCrab for one orbit and 0.3 mCrab for one year). This will be achieved by a set of 4 coded-mask imagers that will operate in scanning mode in a near-Equatorial circular LEO with a lifetime of 4+ years. The pointing directions will maximize the coverage of the Central Galactic Plane. The main objective of MIRAX is to study with unprecedented depth and time coverage (milliseconds to years) a large sample of transient and variable phenomena on accreting neutron stars and black holes. The high cadence of the MIRAX detections will be well suited for simultaneous and follow-up observations in other wavelengths. The satellite bus and launch will be provided by Brazil, whereas the instrument development is a cooperative effort led by CfA and including INPE (Brazil), UCSD, MIT, NASA's GSFC, Caltech and the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany. The MIRAX detectors, developed at CfA, are position-sensitive 5mm-thick CdZnTe with 0.6mm pitch with 756 cm2 effective area at 10 keV (total for the 4 units). The energy resolution is ~2 keV at 60 keV. For exposures near the center of the field of view the sensitivity of MIRAX will approach that of Swift/BAT in the 15-150 keV range, whereas the low threshold will enable ~70 mCrab sensitivity on time scales of 100s at energies inaccessible to Swift/BAT and INTEGRAL. The first unit of one MIRAX telescope has been developed and flown in the protoEXIST-2 (P2) balloon experiment in Fort Sumner, NM, in early October 2012. In this work we describe the MIRAX instruments and discuss results of detector calibration and preliminary results of the P2 balloon flight.
- Publication:
-
American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts #221
- Pub Date:
- January 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AAS...22135015R