The X/Gamma-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XGIS) on-board THESEUS: design, main characteristics, and concept of operation
Claudio Labanti, Lorenzo Amati, Filippo Frontera, Sandro Mereghetti,, Jos\'e Luis Gasent-Blesa, Christoph Tenzer, Piotr Orleanski, Irfan Kuvvetli,, Riccardo Campana, Fabio Fuschino, Luca Terenzi, Enrico Virgilli, Gianluca, Morgante, Mauro Orlandini, Reginald C. Butler

TL;DR
The paper describes the design, main features, and operational concept of the X/Gamma-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XGIS) on the THESEUS mission, highlighting its innovative detection technology and broad energy coverage for transient source detection.
Contribution
It introduces the XGIS instrument's innovative coupling of Silicon Drift Detectors with scintillator bars and its broad energy detection capabilities for the THESEUS mission.
Findings
XGIS uses Silicon Drift Detectors with scintillator bars for broad energy detection.
It covers a large field of view with two coded mask cameras.
The instrument achieves high timing resolution down to microseconds.
Abstract
THESEUS is one of the three missions selected by ESA as fifth medium class mission (M5) candidates in its Cosmic Vision science program, currently under assessment in a phase A study with a planned launch date in 2032. THESEUS is designed to carry on-board two wide and deep sky monitoring instruments for X/gamma-ray transients detection: a wide-field soft X-ray monitor with imaging capability (Soft X-ray Imager, SXI, 0.3 - 5 keV), a hard X-ray, partially-imaging spectroscopic instrument (X and Gamma Imaging Spectrometer, XGIS, 2 keV - 10 MeV), and an optical/near-IR telescope with both imaging and spectroscopic capability (InfraRed Telescope, IRT, 0.7 - 1.8 m). The spacecraft will be capable of performing fast repointing of the IRT to the error region provided by the monitors, thus allowing it to detect and localize the transient sources down to a few arcsec accuracy, for immediate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Nuclear Physics and Applications
