The High Resolution X-Ray Imaging Detector Planes for the MIRAX Mission
Barbara H. G. Rodrigues, Jonathan E. Grindlay, Branden Allen, Jaesub, Hong, Scott Barthelmy, Joao Braga, Flavio D'Amico, Richard E. Rothschild

TL;DR
This paper presents the development, calibration, and validation of high-resolution CZT detector planes for the MIRAX X-ray observatory, demonstrating their readiness for space deployment and their suitability for wide-field X-ray surveys.
Contribution
It introduces the second-generation ProtoEXIST CZT detector plane, showcasing its calibration results and successful balloon flight testing for the MIRAX mission.
Findings
Detectors achieved ~2.1 keV energy resolution at 60 keV
Successful balloon flight demonstrating space readiness
Detectors meet MIRAX mission specifications
Abstract
The MIRAX X-ray observatory, the first Brazilian-led astrophysics space mission, is designed to perform an unprecedented wide-field, wide-band hard X-ray (5-200 keV) survey of Galactic X-ray transient sources. In the current configuration, MIRAX will carry a set of four coded-mask telescopes with high spatial resolution Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CZT) detector planes, each one consisting of an array of 64 closely tiled CZT pixelated detectors. Taken together, the four telescopes will have a total detection area of 959 cm^2, a large field of view (60x60 degrees FWHM), high angular resolution for this energy range (6 arcmin) and very good spectral resolution (~2 keV @ 60 keV). A stratospheric balloon-borne prototype of one of the MIRAX telescopes has been developed, tested and flown by the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) as part of the ProtoEXIST program. In this paper we…
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