The SRG X-ray orbital observatory, its telescopes and first scientific results
R. Sunyaev, V. Arefiev, V. Babyshkin, A. Bogomolov, K. Borisov, M., Buntov, H. Brunner, R. Burenin, E. Churazov, D. Coutinho, J. Eder, N., Eismont, M. Freyberg, M. Gilfanov, P. Gureyev, G. Hasinger, I. Khabibullin,, V. Kolmykov, S. Komovkin, R. Krivonos, I. Lapshov, V. Levin

TL;DR
The SRG X-ray observatory, equipped with the ART-XC and eROSITA telescopes, has conducted the first all-sky X-ray survey, producing detailed maps that reveal millions of celestial objects and enable long-term variability studies.
Contribution
This paper presents the first all-sky X-ray maps from SRG, demonstrating its capability to detect millions of quasars and galaxy clusters, and introduces its survey strategy and initial scientific results.
Findings
Completed three all-sky surveys by mid-2021
Detected over three million quasars and 100,000 galaxy clusters
Produced high-sensitivity X-ray maps revealing celestial sources
Abstract
The orbital observatory Spectrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG), equipped with the grazing-incidence X-ray telescopes Mikhail Pavlinsky ART-XC and eROSITA, was launched by Roscosmos to the Lagrange L2 point of the Sun-Earth system on July 13, 2019. The launch was carried out from the Baikonur Cosmodrome by a Proton-M rocket with a DM-03 upper stage. The German telescope eROSITA was installed on SRG under an agreement between Roskosmos and the DLR, the German Aerospace Agency. In December 2019, SRG started to perform its main scientific task: scanning the celestial sphere to obtain X-ray maps of the entire sky in several energy ranges (from 0.2 to 8 keV with eROSITA, and from 4 to 30 keV with ART-XC). By mid-June 2021, the third six-month all-sky survey had been completed. Over a period of four years, it is planned to obtain eight independent maps of the entire sky in each of the energy ranges.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
