The design and flight performance of the PoGOLite Pathfinder balloon-borne hard X-ray polarimeter
M. Chauvin, H.-G. Flor\'en, M. Jackson, T. Kamae, T. Kawano, M. Kiss,, M. Kole, V. Mikhalev, E. Moretti, G. Olofsson, S. Rydstr\"om, H. Takahashi,, J. Lind, J.-E. Str\"omberg, O. Welin, A. Iyudin, D. Shifrin, M. Pearce

TL;DR
The paper presents the design, implementation, and flight performance of the PoGOLite Pathfinder, a balloon-borne X-ray polarimeter operating in the 25-240 keV range, demonstrating its capabilities through Crab observations and outlining future plans.
Contribution
It introduces the PoGOLite Pathfinder's design and successful flight performance, advancing balloon-borne X-ray polarimetry techniques for astrophysical research.
Findings
Achieved a signal-to-background ratio of 0.25
Minimum Detectable Polarisation is 28.4% at 99% confidence level
Conducted three Crab observations during a two-week flight
Abstract
In the 50 years since the advent of X-ray astronomy there have been many scientific advances due to the development of new experimental techniques for detecting and characterising X-rays. Observations of X-ray polarisation have, however, not undergone a similar development. This is a shortcoming since a plethora of open questions related to the nature of X-ray sources could be resolved through measurements of the linear polarisation of emitted X-rays. The PoGOLite Pathfinder is a balloon-borne hard X-ray polarimeter operating in the 25 - 240 keV energy band from a stabilised observation platform. Polarisation is determined using coincident energy deposits in a segmented array of plastic scintillators surrounded by a BGO anticoincidence system and a polyethylene neutron shield. The PoGOLite Pathfinder was launched from the SSC Esrange Space Centre in July 2013. A near-circumpolar flight…
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