Flight Performance of an advanced CZT Imaging Detector in a Balloon-borne Wide-Field Hard X-ray Telescope - ProtoEXIST1
J. Hong, B. Allen, J. Grindlay, S. Barthelemy, R. Baker, A. Garson, H., Krawczynski, J. Apple, W. H. Cleveland

TL;DR
This paper reports the successful high-altitude balloon flight of ProtoEXIST1, a wide-field hard X-ray telescope using advanced CZT detectors, demonstrating promising performance and potential for future space-based X-ray astronomy.
Contribution
It presents the first flight of an advanced CZT detector in a balloon-borne wide-field X-ray telescope, showcasing its capabilities and pointing towards future developments.
Findings
CZT detector performed excellently during flight
Detected Cyg X-1 at 7.2 sigma in 30-100 keV band
Flight demonstrated the viability of advanced CZT technology for X-ray telescopes
Abstract
We successfully carried out the first high-altitude balloon flight of a wide-field hard X-ray coded-aperture telescope ProtoEXIST1, which was launched from the Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility at Ft. Sumner, New Mexico on October 9, 2009. ProtoEXIST1 is the first implementation of an advanced CdZnTe (CZT) imaging detector in our ongoing program to establish the technology required for next generation wide-field hard X-ray telescopes. The CZT detector plane in ProtoEXIST1 consists of an 8 x 8 array of closely tiled 2 cm x 2 cm x 0.5 cm thick pixellated CZT crystals, each with 8 x 8 pixels, covering a 256 cm^2 active area with 2.5 mm pixels. A tungsten mask, mounted at 90 cm above the detector provides shadowgrams of X-ray sources in the 30 - 600 keV band for imaging, allowing a fully coded field of view of 9 Deg x 9 Deg with an angular resolution of 20 arcmin. To reduce the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
