In-orbit background of X-ray microcalorimeters and its effects on observations
S. Lotti, D. Cea, C. Macculi, T. Mineo, L. Natalucci, E. Perinati, L., Piro, M. Federici, B. Martino

TL;DR
This study uses Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate the in-orbit background of X-ray microcalorimeters, demonstrating how design improvements and shielding can significantly reduce background noise, enabling detailed observations of faint cosmic sources.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive simulation-based analysis of background reduction techniques for X-ray microcalorimeters in space, optimizing their observational capabilities.
Findings
Active cryogenic anticoincidence reduces background by an order of magnitude.
Design improvements can further reduce background by a factor of 6.
L2 orbit background levels can match LEO with passive shielding, enhancing observation potential.
Abstract
Methods.There are no experimental data about the background experienced by microcalorimeters in the L2 orbit, and thus the particle background levels were calculated by means of Monte Carlo simulations: we considered the original design configuration and an improved configuration aimed to reduce the unrejected background, and tested them in the L2 orbit and in the low Earth orbit, comparing the results with experimental data reported by other X-ray instruments.To show the results obtainable with the improved configuration we simulated the observation of a faint, high-redshift, point source (F[0.5-10 keV]~6.4E-16 erg cm-2 s-1, z=3.7), and of a hot galaxy cluster at R200 (Sb[0.5-2 keV]=8.61E-16 erg cm-2 s-1 arcmin-2,T=6.6 keV). Results.First we confirm that implementing an active cryogenic anticoincidence reduces the particle background by an order of magnitude and brings it close to the…
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