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The DUAL mission concept

Authors :
Nicolas M. Barrière
José Alvarez
Andrei M. Bykov
Jürgen Knödlseder
Lorraine Hanlon
Pierre Jean
Rui Curado da Silva
Juan Manuel Del Cura Velayos
Peter von Ballmoos
Emmanuel Hinglais
Mark D. Leising
Jean Pierre Prost
Lucien Kuiper
Margarita Hernanz
John A. Tomsick
Tadayuki Takahashi
Filippo Frontera
Roland Walter
S. E. Boggs
Benoît Pirard
Jordi Isern
Andreas Zoglauer
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
SPIE, 2011.

Abstract

DUAL will study the origin and evolution of the elements and explores new frontiers of physics: extreme energies that drive powerful stellar explosions and accelerate particles to macroscopic energies; extreme densities that modify the laws of physics around the most compact objects known; and extreme fields that influence matter in a way that is unknown on Earth. The variability of these extreme objects requires continuous all-sky coverage, while detailed study demands an improvement in sensitivity over previous technologies by at least an order of magnitude. The DUAL payload is composed of an All-Sky Compton Imager (ASCI), and two optical modules, the Laue-Lens Optic (LLO) and the Coded-Mask Optic (CMO). The ASCI serves dual roles simultaneously, both as an optimal focal-plane sensor for deep observations with the optical modules and as a sensitive true all-sky telescope in its own right for all-sky surveys and monitoring. While the optical modules are located on the main satellite, the All-Sky Compton Imager is situated on a deployable structure at a distance of 30 m from the satellite. This configuration not only permits to maintain the less massive payload at the focal distance, it also greatly reduces the spacecraft-induced detector background, and, above all it provides ASCI with a continuous all-sky exposure.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........00b7e20c5e6dcbe3c37c6b4f58c5966c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.895419