Английская Википедия:EROSITA
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Lowercase title Шаблон:Infobox spacecraft instrument
eROSITA is an X-ray instrument built by the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (MPE) in Germany. It is part of the Russian–German Spektr-RG space observatory, which also carries the Russian telescope ART-XC. It was launched by Roscosmos on 13 July 2019 from Baikonur, and deployed in a 6-month halo orbit around the second Lagrange point (L2).[1] It began collecting data in October 2019. Due to the breakdown of institutional cooperation between Germany and Russia after the invasion of Ukraine, the instrument stopped collecting data on February 26, 2022.[2]
Overview
eROSITA was originally designed by the ESA for the International Space Station, and it was concluded in 2005 that its accommodation on a dedicated free flyer would provide significantly improved scientific output.[3] The eROSITA telescopes are based on the design of the ABRIXAS observatory launched in April 1999, whose battery was accidentally overcharged and destroyed three days after the mission started.[3]
The plan was eROSITA imaging the entire sky in the X-ray band for seven years. The eROSITA all-sky survey (eRASS) was the first image of the entire sky in the 2-10 keV band. In the 0.3-2 keV band, it is expected to be 25 times more sensitive than the pioneering ROSAT mission of the 1990s, and will effectively supersede it.[4] eROSITA is expected to detect 100,000 galaxy clusters, 3 million active galactic nuclei and 700,000 stars in the Milky Way. The primary science goal is to measure dark energy through the structure and history of the Universe traced by galaxy clusters.
eROSITA was launched on 13 July 2019 by Roscosmos from Baikonur.[1] It achieved first light on 17 October 2019[5] and completed its first all-sky survey on 11 June 2020.[6] In the summer of 2021 the first eROSITA X-ray data release to the public was announced.[7] The operations of eROSITA were suspended on 26 February 2022 after the Russian attack into Ukraine. The science operations of the instrument were paused, but the analysis of the data already received in Germany continued. At the time, eROSITA had completed four of its planned eight full-sky surveys.[8] In June 2022, Roscosmos announced its intent to restore the operation of eROSITA unilaterally, which was criticized by experts for its potential to damage the telescope.[9][10]
Construction
The telescope consists of seven identical Wolter-type mirror modules with 54 nested gold-coated mirrors. The mirrors are arranged to collect the high-energy X-ray photons and guide them to the eROSITA X-ray sensitive cameras. The cameras were also custom-built at MPE, with X-ray CCDs manufactured from high-purity silicon. For optimum performance, the cameras are cooled to Шаблон:Convert.[11]
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The seven mirror modules from the front
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X-ray detectors behind each mirror
Instruments
eROSITA[12] | ART-XC | |
---|---|---|
Organisation | Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics | IKI / VNIIEF |
Telescope type | Wolter | Wolter |
Wavelength | X-ray | X-ray |
Mass | 810 kg | 350 kg |
Sensitivity range | 0.3 - 10 keV | 6 - 30 keV |
View angle | 1 degree (diameter) | 30 minutes |
Angular resolution | 15 seconds | 45 seconds |
Sensor area | 2,400 cm2/ 1 keV | 450 cm2/ 8 keV |
Collaboration
eROSITA was developed at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in collaboration with institutes in Bamberg, Hamburg, Potsdam und Tübingen. The instrument principal investigator is Peter Predehl. The project scientist is Andrea Merloni. The German eROSITA consortium has members from institutes all across Germany, but also from international institutes, and has established collaborations with ground-based telescopes for follow-up observations of the millions of sources that will be detected by eROSITA.
Science results
First science verification results were released on October 22, 2019,[13] including high-resolution spectra of Supernova 1987a, images of the Large Magellanic Cloud and galaxy clusters, as well as light curves of a highly variable Active Galactic Nuclei.
The first all-sky survey was completed on June 11, 2020,[14] cataloging 1.1 million sources, including mostly Active Galactic Nuclei (77%), stars with strong, magnetically active hot coronae (20%) and clusters of galaxies (2%), but also bright X-ray binaries, supernova remnants, extended star-forming regions as well as transients such as Gamma-Ray Bursts.[15] The map includes extended features of the Milky Way, including mushroom-like bubbles and absorbing galactic gas in the disk (blue).[16]
See also
References
External links
- Home page of eROSITA
- Nature news article
- eROSITA science book
- Simulations of the expected X-ray sky
- Project news on Twitter
- Video animation
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