The X-ray CCD camera of the MAXI Experiment on the ISS/JEM
physics.ins-det
/ Authors
E. Miyata, H. Tsunemi, H. Ogata, D. Akutsu, K. Yoshita, Y. Hashimoto, K. Torii, M. Matsuoka, N. Kawai, A. Yoshida
and 9 more authors
T. Mihara, T. Kotani, H. Negoro, H. Kubo, H. Matsumoto, Y. Shirasaki, B. C. Rubin, I. Sakurai, M. Yamauchi
/ Abstract
MAXI, Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image, is the X-ray observatory on the Japanese experimental module (JEM) Exposed Facility (EF) on the International Space Station (ISS). MAXI is a slit scanning camera which consists of two kinds of X-ray detectors: one is a one-dimensional position-sensitive proportional counter with a total area of $\sim 5000 cm^2$, the Gas Slit Camera (GSC), and the other is an X-ray CCD array with a total area $\sim 200 cm^2$, the Solid-state Slit Camera (SSC). The GSC subtends a field of view with an angular dimension of 1$^\circ\times 180^\circ$ while the SSC subtends a field of view with an angular dimension of 1$^\circ$ times a little less than 180$^\circ$. In the course of one station orbit, MAXI can scan almost the entire sky with a precision of 1$^\circ$ and with an X-ray energy range of 0.5-30 keV. We have developed the engineering model of CCD chips and the analogue electronics for the SSC. The energy resolution of EM CCD for Mn K$α$ has a full-width at half maximum of $\simeq$ 182 eV. Readout noise is $\simeq$ 11 e^- rms.