The SMC SNR 1E0102.2-7219 as a Calibration Standard for X-ray Astronomy in the 0.3-2.5 keV Bandpass
Paul P. Plucinsky, Frank Haberl, Daniel Dewey, Andrew P. Beardmore,, Joseph M. DePasquale, Olivier Godet, Victoria Grinberg, Eric D. Miller,, A.M.T. Pollock, Steve Sembay, Randall K. Smith

TL;DR
This study uses the supernova remnant E0102 as a calibration standard across multiple X-ray observatories, enabling improved spectral response models for CCD instruments in the 0.3-2.5 keV band.
Contribution
It establishes E0102 as a reliable calibration source for X-ray CCD instruments, providing a consistent spectral model and cross-instrument flux comparisons.
Findings
Fluxes of key emission lines agree within +/-10% across instruments.
Maximum discrepancies between instruments are below 25%.
Calibration improves the spectral response models of CCD detectors.
Abstract
The flight calibration of the spectral response of CCD instruments below 1.5 keV is difficult in general because of the lack of strong lines in the on-board calibration sources typically available. We have been using 1E 0102.2-7219, the brightest supernova remnant in the Small Magellanic Cloud, to evaluate the response models of the ACIS CCDs on the Chandra X-ray Observatory (CXO), the EPIC CCDs on the XMM-Newton Observatory, the XIS CCDs on the Suzaku Observatory, and the XRT CCD on the Swift Observatory. E0102 has strong lines of O, Ne, and Mg below 1.5 keV and little or no Fe emission to complicate the spectrum. The spectrum of E0102 has been well characterized using high-resolution grating instruments, namely the XMM-Newton RGS and the CXO HETG, through which a consistent spectral model has been developed that can then be used to fit the lower-resolution CCD spectra. We have also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Calibration and Measurement Techniques
