posted on 2019-10-17, 14:55authored byC Pagani, AP Beardmore, AF Abbey, C Mountford, JP Osborne, M Capalbi, M Perri, L Angelini, DN Burrows, S Campana, G Cusumano, PA Evans, JA Kennea, A Moretti, KL Page, RLC Starling
The X-ray telescope on board the Swift satellite for gamma-ray burst astronomy has been exposed to the radiation of the space environment since launch in November 2004. Radiation causes damage to the detector, with the generation of dark current and charge trapping sites that result in the degradation of the spectral resolution and an increase of the instrumental background. The Swift team has a dedicated calibration program with the goal of recovering a significant proportion of the lost spectroscopic performance. Calibration observations of supernova remnants with strong emission lines are analysed to map the detector charge traps and to derive position-dependent corrections to the measured photon energies. We have achieved a substantial recovery in the XRT resolution by implementing these corrections in an updated version of the Swift XRT gain file and in corresponding improvements to the Swift XRT HEAsoft software. We provide illustrations of the impact of the enhanced energy resolution, and show that we have recovered most of the spectral resolution lost since launch.
Funding
This work is supported at INAF by funding from ASI through grant I/R/011/07/0. D.N.B. and J.A.K. acknowledge support by NASA contract NAS5-00136
History
Citation
ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2011, 534(A20)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
This work made use of the data supplied by the UK Swift Science Data Centre at the University of Leicester. This research has made use of the XRT Data Analysis Software (XRTDAS) developed under the responsibility of
the ASI Science Data Center (ASDC), Italy.