The development of a testbed for the X-ray Interferometer mission
Roland den Hartog, Phil Uttley, Richard Willingale, Henk Hoevers,, Jan-Willem den Herder, Michael Wise

TL;DR
This paper discusses developing a scalable testbed for X-ray interferometry to advance from laboratory experiments to space missions with micro arcsecond resolution.
Contribution
It proposes a staged approach to build a versatile testbed addressing optical, thermal, and mechanical challenges for future X-ray interferometer missions.
Findings
Design framework for a multi-stage X-ray interferometry testbed
Identification of key technical challenges in scaling up from lab to space
Guidelines for technological milestones in X-ray interferometry development
Abstract
An X-ray Interferometer (XRI) has recently been proposed as a theme for ESA's Voyage 2050 planning cycle, with the eventual goal to observe the X-ray sky with an unprecedented angular resolution better than 1 micro arcsec (5 prad) [1]. A scientifically very interesting mission is possible on the basis of a single spacecraft [2], owing to the compact 'telephoto' design proposed earlier by Willingale [3]. Between the practical demonstration of X-ray interferometry at 1 keV by Cash et al. [4] with a 1 mm baseline and 0.1 arcsec effective resolution to a mission flying an interferometer with a baseline of one or more meters, an effective collecting area of square meters and micro arcsec resolution lie many milestones. The first important steps to scale up from a laboratory experiment to a viable mission concept will have to be taken on a scalable and flexible testbed set-up. Such a testbed…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
