Use of a ray-tracing simulation to characterize ghost rays in the FOXSI rocket experiment
J.C. Buitrago-Casas, S. Christe, L. Glesener, S. Krucker, B. Ramsey,, S. Bongiorno, K. Kilaru, P.S.Athiray, N. Narukage, S. Ishikawa, G. Dalton,, and S.Courtade S. Musset, J. Vievering, D. Ryan, and S. Bale

TL;DR
This paper develops and validates a ray-tracing simulation to analyze Wolter-I X-ray mirrors in the FOXSI rocket, focusing on characterizing ghost rays and proposing mitigation strategies to improve imaging performance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a validated ray-tracing simulation for Wolter-I X-ray optics, specifically applied to FOXSI, to study ghost rays and optimize optical configurations.
Findings
Simulation agrees well with laboratory data.
Ghost rays can be mitigated with optimized aperture plates, collimators, and absorbers.
Simulation is useful for various X-ray imaging applications.
Abstract
Imaging X-rays by direct focusing offers greater sensitivity and a higher dynamic range compared to techniques based on indirect imaging. The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI) is a sounding rocket payload that uses seven sets of nested Wolter-I figured mirrors to observe the Sun in hard X-rays through direct focusing. Characterizing the performance of these optics is critical to optimize their performance and to understand their resulting data. In this paper, we present a ray-tracing simulation we created and developed to study Wolter-I X-ray mirrors. We validated the accuracy of the ray-tracing simulation by modeling the FOXSI rocket optics. We found satisfactory agreements between the simulation predictions and laboratory data measured on the optics. We used the ray-tracing simulation to characterize a background pattern of singly reflected rays (i.e., ghost rays) generated…
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