Angular resolution measurements at SPring-8 of a hard X-ray optic for the New Hard X-ray Mission
D. Spiga, L. Raimondi, A. Furuzawa, S. Basso, R. Binda, G. Borghi, V., Cotroneo, G. Grisoni, H. Kunieda, F. Marioni, H. Matsumoto, H. Mori, T., Miyazawa, B. Negri, A. Orlandi, G. Pareschi, B. Salmaso, G. Tagliaferri, K., Uesugi, G. Valsecchi, D. Vernani

TL;DR
This paper reports on angular resolution measurements of a hard X-ray optic at SPring-8, demonstrating the effectiveness of a pencil beam test method for characterizing large mirrors for the New Hard X-ray Mission.
Contribution
It introduces a novel testing approach using pencil beam measurements at SPring-8 to evaluate large X-ray mirrors for space telescopes, overcoming limitations of traditional full-illumination tests.
Findings
Measured PSFs at 15-63 keV energies match model predictions
Pencil beam testing effectively characterizes large X-ray mirrors
Results support the mirror's suitability for the NHXM telescope
Abstract
The realization of X-ray telescopes with imaging capabilities in the hard (> 10 keV) X-ray band requires the adoption of optics with shallow (< 0.25 deg) grazing angles to enhance the reflectivity of reflective coatings. On the other hand, to obtain large collecting area, large mirror diameters (< 350 mm) are necessary. This implies that mirrors with focal lengths >10 m shall be produced and tested. Full-illumination tests of such mirrors are usually performed with on- ground X-ray facilities, aimed at measuring their effective area and the angular resolution; however, they in general suffer from effects of the finite distance of the X-ray source, e.g. a loss of effective area for double reflection. These effects increase with the focal length of the mirror under test; hence a "partial" full-illumination measurement might not be fully representative of the in-flight performances.…
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