Science objectives of the Einstein Probe mission
Weimin Yuan, Lixin Dai, Hua Feng, Chichuan Jin, Peter Jonker, Erik, Kuulkers, Yuan Liu, Kirpal Nandra, Paul O'Brien, Luigi Piro, Arne Rau, Nanda, Rea, Jeremy Sanders, Lian Tao, Junfeng Wang, Xuefeng Wu, Bing Zhang,, Shuangnan Zhang, Shunke Ai, Johannes Buchner, Esra Bulbul

TL;DR
The Einstein Probe mission aims to advance time-domain X-ray astronomy by detecting and monitoring a wide range of cosmic transients and variable sources with unprecedented sensitivity and cadence, enhancing multi-messenger astrophysics.
Contribution
This paper presents the science objectives of the Einstein Probe mission, highlighting its novel wide-field lobster-eye X-ray imager and its potential to discover rare and transient X-ray phenomena.
Findings
Expected to enlarge the sample of known transients
Will systematically survey fast extragalactic transients
Potential to detect X-ray counterparts of gravitational wave events
Abstract
The Einstein Probe (EP) is an interdisciplinary mission of time-domain and X-ray astronomy. Equipped with a wide-field lobster-eye X-ray focusing imager, EP will discover cosmic X-ray transients and monitor the X-ray variability of known sources in 0.5-4 keV, at a combination of detecting sensitivity and cadence that is not accessible to the previous and current wide-field monitoring missions. EP can perform quick characterisation of transients or outbursts with a Wolter-I X-ray telescope onboard. In this paper, the science objectives of the Einstein Probe mission are presented. EP is expected to enlarge the sample of previously known or predicted but rare types of transients with a wide range of timescales. Among them, fast extragalactic transients will be surveyed systematically in soft X-rays, which include {\gamma}-ray bursts and their variants, supernova shock breakouts, and the…
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