Optics for X-ray telescopes: analytical treatment of the off-axis effective area of mirrors in optical modules
Daniele Spiga

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical method to accurately compute the off-axis effective area of X-ray telescope mirrors, including obstructions, simplifying and speeding up the process compared to traditional ray-tracing simulations.
Contribution
It extends previous analytical models by inverting the effective area formula and introducing a new analytical treatment for mutual shell obstruction in nested mirror assemblies.
Findings
Analytical formula for off-axis effective area can be inverted.
New analytical approach accurately models mutual shell obstruction.
Results agree well with detailed ray-tracing simulations.
Abstract
Optical modules for X-ray telescopes comprise several double-reflection mirrors operating in grazing incidence. The concentration power of an optical module, which determines primarily the telescope's sensitivity, is in general expressed by its on-axis effective area as a function of the X-ray energy. Nevertheless, the effective area of X-ray mirrors in general decreases as the source moves off-axis, with a consequent loss of sensitivity. To make matters worse, the dense nesting of mirror shells in an optical module results in a mutual obstruction of their aperture when an astronomical source is off-axis, with a further effective area reduction. [...] While the effective area of an X-ray mirror is easy to predict on-axis, the same task becomes more difficult for a source off-axis. It is therefore important to develop an appropriate formalism to reliably compute the off-axis effective…
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