X-ray performance of critical-angle transmission grating prototypes for the Arcus mission
Ralf K. Heilmann, Alexander R. Bruccoleri, Vadim Burwitz, Casey deRoo,, Alan Garner, Hans Moritz Guenther, Eric M. Gullikson, Gisela Hartner, Ed, Hertz, Andreas Langmeier, Thomas Mueller, Surangkhana Rukdee, Thomas Schmidt,, Randall K. Smith, Mark L. Schattenburg

TL;DR
This paper reports on the development and testing of critical-angle transmission gratings for the Arcus X-ray mission, demonstrating record resolving power and meeting efficiency requirements through prototype experiments.
Contribution
It presents new high-resolution X-ray grating prototypes with improved performance, including record resolving power, for the Arcus mission.
Findings
Record resolving power of approximately 1.3×10^4 achieved.
Gratings meet diffraction efficiency requirements.
Prototype performance exceeds Arcus mission specifications.
Abstract
Arcus is a proposed soft x-ray grating spectrometer Explorer. It aims to explore cosmic feedback by mapping hot gases within and between galaxies and galaxy clusters and characterizing jets and winds from supermassive black holes, and to investigate the dynamics of protoplanetary discs and stellar accretion. Arcus features 12 m-focal-length grazing-incidence silicon pore optics (SPO) developed for the Athena mission. Critical-angle transmission (CAT) gratings efficiently disperse high diffraction orders onto CCDs. We report new and improved x-ray performance results for Arcus-like CAT gratings, including record resolving power for two co-aligned CAT gratings. Multiple Arcus prototype grating facets were illuminated by an SPO at the PANTER facility. The facets consist of mm patterned silicon membranes, bonded to metal frames. The bonding angle is adjusted according to…
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