First light of BEaTriX, the new testing facility for the modular X-ray optics of the ATHENA mission
S. Basso, B. Salmaso, D. Spiga, M. Ghigo, G. Vecchi, G. Sironi, V., Cotroneo, P. Conconi, E. Redaelli, A. Bianco, G. Pareschi, G. Tagliaferri, D., Sisana, C. Pelliciari, M. Fiorini, S. Incorvaia, M. Uslenghi, L. Paoletti, C., Ferrari, R. Lolli, A. Zappettini, M. Sanchez del Rio

TL;DR
BEaTriX is a newly operational X-ray testing facility designed to measure the PSF and EA of ATHENA's silicon pore optics modules, enabling precise verification before assembly.
Contribution
This paper introduces the first operational setup of BEaTriX, a specialized X-ray beamline for testing and characterizing modular X-ray optics for space telescopes.
Findings
BEaTriX generates a broad, uniform, monochromatic X-ray beam at 4.51 keV.
The beam has dimensions of 170 mm x 60 mm with specific divergence and flux characteristics.
Initial tests with an SPO mirror module confirmed the beam's effectiveness in measuring PSF and EA.
Abstract
The Beam Expander Testing X-ray facility (BEaTriX) is a unique X-ray apparatus now operated at the Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica (INAF), Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera (OAB), in Merate, Italy. It has been specifically designed to measure the point spread function (PSF) and the effective area (EA) of the X-ray mirror modules (MMs) of the Advanced Telescope for High-ENergy Astrophysics (ATHENA), based on silicon pore optics (SPO) technology, for verification before integration into the mirror assembly. To this end, BEaTriX generates a broad, uniform, monochromatic, and collimated X-ray beam at 4.51 keV. [...] In BEaTriX, a micro-focus X-ray source with a titanium anode is placed in the focus of a paraboloidal mirror, which generates a parallel beam. A crystal monochromator selects the 4.51 keV line, which is expanded to the final size by a crystal asymmetrically cut with respect to…
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