Science with the XEUS High Time Resolution Spectrometer
D. Barret (CESR), T. Belloni (INAF), S. Bhattacharyya (Tata, institute), E. Cackett (Univ. Michigan), M. Gilfanov (MPA&IKI), E.Gigus, (Sabanci Univ.), J. Homan (MIT), M. Mendez (Univ. Groningen), J. M. Miller, (Univ. Michigan), M. C. Miller (Univ. Maryland), S. Mereghetti (INAF)

TL;DR
The paper discusses the design and scientific goals of the High Time Resolution Spectrometer (HTRS) on the XEUS mission, emphasizing its capability to study matter under extreme conditions with high temporal and spectral resolution.
Contribution
It introduces the HTRS instrument for XEUS, highlighting its unique high count rate handling and timing capabilities for probing extreme astrophysical phenomena.
Findings
HTRS can handle up to 2 million counts per second.
It provides sub-millisecond time resolution and CCD-like energy resolution.
The instrument aims to study strong gravity and supra-nuclear density matter.
Abstract
XEUS has been recently selected by ESA for an assessment study. XEUS is a large mission candidate for the Cosmic Vision program, aiming for a launch date as early as 2018. XEUS is a follow-on to ESA's Cornerstone X-Ray Spectroscopy Mission (XMM-Newton). It will be placed in a halo orbit at L2, by a single Ariane 5 ECA, and comprises two spacecrafts. The Silicon pore optics assembly of XEUS is contained in the mirror spacecraft while the focal plane instruments are contained in the detector spacecraft, which is maintained at the focus of the mirror by formation flying. The main requirements for XEUS are to provide a focused beam of X-rays with an effective aperture of 5 m^2 at 1 keV, 2 m^2 at 7 keV, a spatial resolution better than 5 arcsec, a spectral resolution ranging from 2 to 6 eV in the 0.1-8 keV energy band, a total energy bandpass of 0.1-40 keV, ultra-fast timing, and finally…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · X-ray Spectroscopy and Fluorescence Analysis
