Reproducibility and monitoring of the instrumental particle background for the X-Ray Integral Field Unit
Edoardo Cucchetti, Etienne Pointecouteau, Didier Barret, Simone Lotti,, Claudio Macculi, Silvano Molendi, Fran\c{c}ois Pajot, Philippe Peille, Luigi, Piro, Gabriel W. Pratt

TL;DR
This paper discusses methods to accurately monitor and reproduce the instrumental particle background for the X-IFU instrument on Athena, crucial for observing faint X-ray sources like galaxy clusters.
Contribution
It proposes strategies for in-flight monitoring of the non-X-ray background to achieve 2% reproducibility, enhancing the instrument's scientific capabilities.
Findings
Reproducibility of 2% on background knowledge is necessary for science goals.
Closed observations, CryoAC, and Wide Field Imager can be used for background monitoring.
Monitoring strategies ensure sensitivity for faint source observations.
Abstract
The X-ray Integral Field Unit (X-IFU) is the cryogenic imaging spectrometer on board the future X-ray observatory \textsl{Athena}. With a hexagonal array of 3840 AC-biased Transition Edge Sensors (TES), it will provide narrow-field observations (5 equivalent diameter) with unprecedented high spectral resolution (2.5 eV up to 7 keV) over the 0.2 - 12 keV bandpass. Throughout its observations, the X-IFU will face various sources of X-ray background. Specifically, the so-called Non-X-ray Background (NXB) caused by the interaction of high-energy cosmic rays with the instrument, may lead to a degradation of its sensitivity in the observation of faint extended sources (e.g. galaxy clusters outskirts). To limit this effect, a cryogenic anti-coincidence detector (CryoAC) will be placed below the detector plane to lower the NXB level down to the required level of …
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