REX: X-ray experiment on the Water Recovery Rocket

This paper presents Rocket Experiment (REX) that was part of a dual payload rocket campaign for NASA's sounding rocket Black Brant IX with water recovery technology. This mission was a suborbital sounding rocket flight that was launched and recovered on April 4, 2018 and targeted the Vela super...

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Hauptverfasser: Urban, Martin, Nentvich, Ondrej, Baca, Tomas, Vertat, Ivo, Marsikova, Veronika, Doubravova, Daniela, Daniel, Vladimir, Inneman, Adolf, Pina, Ladisla, McEntaffer, Randall L, Schultz, Ted B, Miles, Drew M, Tutt, James H
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creator Urban, Martin
Nentvich, Ondrej
Baca, Tomas
Vertat, Ivo
Marsikova, Veronika
Doubravova, Daniela
Daniel, Vladimir
Inneman, Adolf
Pina, Ladisla
McEntaffer, Randall L
Schultz, Ted B
Miles, Drew M
Tutt, James H
description This paper presents Rocket Experiment (REX) that was part of a dual payload rocket campaign for NASA's sounding rocket Black Brant IX with water recovery technology. This mission was a suborbital sounding rocket flight that was launched and recovered on April 4, 2018 and targeted the Vela supernova remnant. The purpose of REX was to classify the Technology Readiness Level of onboard devices designed for space applications. The devices were two wide-field X-ray telescopes consisting of a combination of Lobster-Eye (LE) optics with an uncooled Timepix detector (256 x 256 px @ 55 um), and additional sensors. The first telescope uses a two-dimensional combination of LE modules with a focal length of 1 m and a Field of View (FOV) of 1.0 x 1.2 deg and operates in the energy range of 3 - 60 keV. The second telescope was a one-dimensional LE with a focal length of 250 mm and a FOV of 2.7 x 8.0 deg for the energy range 3 - 40 keV. The X-ray telescopes were supplemented by a camera in the visible spectrum with 1,280 x 1,024 px resolution, which was used to obtain images of the observed sources and to verify the resulting pointing of the rocket carrier. Other devices also include infrared array sensors and inertial measurement units tested for future small satellite missions. The data handler and communication system were built using the Robot Operating System, and both the system and the electronics were deployed and operated in flight. The hardware was successfully recovered after the launch and the data were extracted.
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subjects Communications systems
Field of view
Inertial platforms
Inertial sensing devices
Infrared detectors
Physics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Recovery
Rocket flight
Rocket launches
Sensor arrays
Small satellites
Sounding rockets
Space applications
Space telescopes
Supernova remnants
Technology assessment
Visible spectrum
X ray telescopes
title REX: X-ray experiment on the Water Recovery Rocket
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