Abstract
The Water Recovery X-Ray Rocket (WRXR) was a suborbital rocket payload that was launched and recovered in April 2018. The WRXR flew two technologies being developed for future large x-ray missions: x-ray reflection gratings and a hybrid CMOS detector (HCD). The large-format replicated gratings on the WRXR were measured in ground calibrations to have absolute single-order diffraction efficiency of similar to 60\%, similar to 50\%, and similar to 35\% at CVI, OVII, and OVIII emission energies, respectively. The HCD was operated with similar to 6 e(-) read noise and similar to 88 eV energy resolution at 0.5 keV. The WRXR was also part of a two-payload campaign that successfully demonstrated NASA sounding rocket water recovery technology for science payloads. The primary instrument, a soft x-ray grating spectrometer, targeted diffuse emission from the Vela supernova remnant over a field-of-view >10 deg(2). The flight data show that the detector was operational during flight and detected x-ray events from an on-board calibration source, but there was no definitive detection of x-ray events from Vela. Flight results are presented along with a discussion of factors that could have contributed to the null detection. (C) 2019 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
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CITATION STYLE
Miles, D. M., Hull, S. V., Schultz, T. B., Tutt, J. H., Wages, M., Donovan, B. D., … Zhang, N. (2019). Water Recovery X-Ray Rocket grating spectrometer. Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems, 5(04), 1. https://doi.org/10.1117/1.jatis.5.4.044006
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