Deconvolution of Images Taken with the Suzaku X-ray Imaging Spectrometer
Mutsumi Sugizaki, Tuneyoshi Kamae, and Yoshitomo Maeda

TL;DR
This paper introduces a non-iterative deconvolution method for Suzaku X-ray images, significantly improving spatial resolution from 110'' to about 20'' without assuming source models, enabling better analysis of extended X-ray sources.
Contribution
A novel, non-iterative deconvolution technique tailored for Suzaku X-ray images that enhances spatial resolution without relying on source models.
Findings
Achieved spatial resolution improvement to ~20'' from 110''
Validated method on real Suzaku images of astronomical objects
Potential for further enhancement with better PSF modeling
Abstract
We present a non-iterative method to deconvolve the spatial response function or the point spread function (PSF) from images taken with the Suzaku X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XIS). The method is optimized for analyses of extended sources with high photon statistics. Suzaku has four XIS detectors each with its own X-ray CCD and X-Ray Telescope (XRT) and has been providing unique opportunities in spatially-resolved spectroscopic analyses of extended objects. The detectors, however, suffer from broad and position-dependent PSFs with their typical half-power density (HPD) of about 110''. In the authors' view, this shortcoming has been preventing the high collecting area and high spectral resolution of Suzaku to be fully exploited. The present method is intended to recover spatial resolution to ~15'' over a dynamic range around 1:100 in the brightness without assuming any source model. Our…
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