Physics – Optics
Scientific paper
Nov 1994
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1994spie.2279..283j&link_type=abstract
Proc. SPIE Vol. 2279, p. 283-286, Advances in Multilayer and Grazing Incidence X-Ray/EUV/FUV Optics, Richard B. Hoover; Arthur B
Physics
Optics
Scientific paper
Silicon wafers have excellent optical properties--low microroughness and good medium-scale flatness--which make them suitable candidates for inexpensive flat-plate grazing-incidence x- ray mirrors. On short spatial scales (< 3 mm) the surface quality of silicon wafers rivals that expected of the Advanced X-Ray Astrophysics Facility high-resolution optics. On larger spatial scales, however, performance may be degraded by the departure from flatness of the wafer and by distortions induced by the mounting scheme. In order to investigate such effects, we designed and constructed a prototype silicon-wafer x-ray telescope. The device was then tested in both visible light and x rays. The telescope module consists of 94 150-mm-diameter wafers, densely packed into the first stage of a Kirkpatrick-Baez configuration. X-ray tests at three energies (4.5, 6.4, and 8.0 keV) showed an energy-independent line spread function with full width at half maximum of 150 arcseconds, dominated by deviations from large-scale flatness.
Fair Sara B.
Joy Marshall K.
Kolodziejczak Jeffery J.
Ramsey Brian D.
Weisskopf Martin C.
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