Miniature lightweight x-ray optics (MiXO) for surface elemental composition mapping of asteroids and comets
Jaesub Hong, Suzanne Romaine, the MiXO team

TL;DR
This paper introduces MiXO, a miniature, lightweight X-ray focusing optics for planetary surface composition mapping, enabling compact, high-performance in-situ X-ray imaging of small bodies like asteroids and comets.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel metal-ceramic hybrid X-ray mirror design for lightweight, compact focusing optics suitable for planetary missions, surpassing previous micro-pore optics performance.
Findings
MiXO enables compact, high-performance X-ray imaging for small planetary bodies.
MiXO outperforms micro-pore optics in key performance metrics.
Potential to significantly advance planetary surface composition studies.
Abstract
The compositions of diverse planetary bodies are of fundamental interest to planetary science, providing clues to the formation and evolutionary history of the target bodies and the Solar system as a whole. Utilizing the X-ray fluorescence unique to each atomic element, X-ray imaging spectroscopy is a powerful diagnostic tool of the chemical and mineralogical compositions of diverse planetary bodies. Until now the mass and volume of focusing X-ray optics have been too large for resource-limited in-situ missions, so near-target X-ray observations of planetary bodies have been limited to simple collimator-type X-ray instruments. We introduce a new Miniature lightweight Wolter-I focusing X-ray Optics (MiXO) using metal-ceramic hybrid X-ray mirrors based on electroformed nickel replication and plasma thermal spray processes. MiXO can enable compact, powerful imaging X-ray telescopes…
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