HERMES Pathfinder & SpIRIT: a progress report
F. Fiore, M. Trenti, Y. Evangelista, R. Campana, G. Baroni, F., Ceraudo, M. Citossi, G. Della Casa, G. Dilillo, M. Feroci, M. Fiorini, G., Ghirlanda, C. Labanti, G. La Rosa, E.J. Marchesini, G. Morgante, L. Nava, P., Nogara, A. Nuti, M. Perri, F. Russo, G. Sottile

TL;DR
HERMES Pathfinder and SpIRIT are innovative cubesat missions demonstrating efficient detection and localization of cosmic high-energy transients using miniature hardware, with potential for future all-sky monitoring of gravitational wave counterparts.
Contribution
The paper reports on the progress of two cubesat missions that utilize novel X-ray/gamma-ray detectors, showcasing advancements in miniaturized high-energy astrophysics instrumentation and distributed architectures.
Findings
Successful development of broad spectral coverage detectors
Achieved time resolution better than one microsecond
Demonstrated the feasibility of low-cost, high-performance payloads
Abstract
HERMES Pathfinder is an in-orbit demonstration consisting of a constellation of six 3U cubesats hosting simple but innovative X-ray/gamma-ray detectors for the monitoring of cosmic high-energy transients. HERMES-PF, funded by ASI and by the EC Horizon 2020 grant, is scheduled for launch in Q1 2025. An identical X-ray/gamma-ray detector is hosted by the Australian 6U cubesat SpIRIT, launched on December 1st 2023. The main objective of HERMES-PF/SpIRIT is to demonstrate that high energy cosmic transients can be detected efficiently by miniatured hardware and localized using triangulation techniques. The HERMES-PF X-ray/gamma-ray detector is made by 60 GAGG:Ce scintillator crystals and 12 2x5 silicon drift detector (SDD) mosaics, used to detect both the cosmic X-rays directly and the optical photons produced by gamma-ray interactions with the scintillator crystals. This design provides a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
