The Instrument of the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer
Paolo Soffitta, Luca Baldini, Ronaldo Bellazzini, Enrico Costa, Luca, Latronico, Fabio Muleri, Ettore Del Monte, Sergio Fabiani, Massimo Minuti,, Michele Pinchera, Carmelo Sgr\`o, Gloria Spandre, Alessio Trois, Fabrizio, Amici, Hans Andersson, Primo Attin\`a, Matteo Bachetti

TL;DR
The paper describes the design, technological choices, and calibration of the IXPE instrument, a novel X-ray polarimetry detector based on the photoelectric effect, enabling new polarization measurements of celestial X-ray sources.
Contribution
It introduces the IXPE instrument, a new X-ray polarimeter with three detector units, advancing the capabilities of X-ray polarization measurements in astronomy.
Findings
Successful calibration of the instrument
Enhanced sensitivity for X-ray polarization detection
Potential to observe a wide range of celestial sources
Abstract
While X-ray Spectroscopy, Timing and Imaging have improved verymuch since 1962, when the first astronomical non-solar source was discovered, especially with the launch of Newton/X-ray Multi-Mirror Mission, Rossi/X-ray Timing Explorer and Chandra/Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility, the progress of X-ray polarimetry has been meager. This is in part due to the lack of sensitive polarization detectors, in part due to the fate of approved missions and in part because the celestial X-ray sources appeared less polarized than expected. Only one positive measurement has been available until now. Indeed the eight Orbiting Solar Observatory measured the polarization of the Crab nebula in the 70s. The advent of techniques of microelectronics allowed for designing a detector based on the photoelectric effect in gas in an energy range where the optics are efficient in focusing X-rays. Herewe…
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