Fresnel lenses for X-ray and Gamma-ray Astronomy
Phase Fresnel lenses have the same imaging properties as zone plates, but with the possibility of concentrating all of the incident power into the primary focus, increasing the maximum theoretical efficiency from 11% to close to 100%. For X-rays, and in particular for gamma-rays, large, diffraction-...
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Zusammenfassung: | Phase Fresnel lenses have the same imaging properties as zone plates, but
with the possibility of concentrating all of the incident power into the
primary focus, increasing the maximum theoretical efficiency from 11% to close
to 100%. For X-rays, and in particular for gamma-rays, large,
diffraction-limited phase Fresnel lenses can be made relatively easily. The
focal length is very long - for example up to a million kms. However, the
correspondingly high `plate-scale' of the image means that the ultra-high
(sub-micro-arc-second) angular resolution possible with a diffraction limited
gamma-ray lens a few metres in diameter can be exploited with detectors having
\~mm spatial resolution.
The potential of such systems for ultra-high angular resolution astronomy,
and for attaining the sensitivity improvements desperately needed for certain
other studies, are reviewed and the advantages and disadvantages vis-a-vis
alternative approaches are discussed.
We report on reduced-scale 'proof-of-principle tests' which are planned and
on mission studies of the implementation of a Fresnel telescope on a space
mission with lens and detector on two spacecraft separated by one million km.
Such a telescope would be capable of resolving emission from super-massive
black holes on the scale of their event horizons and would have the sensitivity
necessary to detect gamma-ray lines from distant supernovae.
We show how diffractive/refractive optics leads to a continuum of possible
system designs between filled aperture lenses and wideband interferometric
arrays. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0308445 |