Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Handbook of X-ray astronomy / edited by Keith A. Arnaud, Randall K. Smith and Aneta Siemiginowska
Published Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011

Copies

Description 1 online resource (viii, 197 pages) : illustrations
Series Cambridge observing handbooks for research astronomers
Cambridge observing handbooks for research astronomers.
Contents 1. Optics / Daniel A. Schwartz -- 2. Detectors / Richard J. Edgar -- 3. Charge-coupled devices / Catherine E. Grant -- 4. Data reduction and calibration / Keith A. Arnaud and Randall K. Smith -- 5. Data analysis / Randall K. Smith, Keith A. Arnaud and Aneta Siemiginowska -- 6. Archives, surveys, catalogs, and software / Keith Arnaud -- 7. Statistics / Aneta Siemiginowska -- 8. Extended emission / Kip D. Kuntz -- Appendices
Summary "It may be obvious why visible astronomy utilizes images, but it is illustrative to consider the value of focusing to X-ray astronomy. A list of advantages offered by the best possible two-dimensional angular resolution would include: (i) Resolving sources with small angular separation and distinguishing different regions of the same source. (ii) Using the image morphology to apply intuition in choosing specific models for quantitative fits to the data. (iii) Using as a "collector" to gather photons. This is necessary because X-ray-source fluxes are so low that individual X-ray photons are detected; the weakest sources give less than one photon per day. (iv) Using as a "concentrator," so that the photons from individual sources interact in such a small region of the detector that residual non-X-ray background counts are negligible. (v) Measuring sources of interest and simultaneously determining the contaminating background using other regions of the detector. (vi) Using with dispersive spectrometers such as transmission or reflection gratings to provide high spectral resolution. The Earth's atmosphere completely absorbs cosmic X-rays. Consequently, X-ray observatories must be launched into space; so size, weight, and cost are always important constraints on the design. In practice this leads to a trade-off between the best possible angular resolution and the largest possible collecting area. Realizing an X-ray telescope involves two key issues: reflection of X-rays, and formation of an image"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 190-194) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject X-ray astronomy.
SCIENCE -- Astronomy.
NATURE -- Sky Observation.
X-ray astronomy
Form Electronic book
Author Arnaud, Keith A., 1959-
Smith, Randall K. (Randall Knowles), 1969-
Siemiginowska, Aneta
LC no. 2011023034
ISBN 9781139157087
1139157086
9781139160896
1139160893
9781139034234
1139034235
128334095X
9781283340953
9781139158848
1139158848
1107226082
9781107226081
1139159895
9781139159890
9786613340955
6613340952
1139155334
9781139155335