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A Broadband X-Ray Imaging Spectroscopy with High-Angular Resolution: the FORCE MissionWe are proposing FORCE (Focusing On Relativistic universe and Cosmic Evolution) as a future Japan-lead X-ray observatory to be launched in the mid 2020s. Hitomi (ASTRO-H) possesses a suite of sensitive instruments enabling the highest energy-resolution spectroscopy in soft X-ray band, a broadband X-ray imaging spectroscopy in soft and hard X-ray bands, and further high energy coverage up to soft gamma-ray band. FORCE is the direct successor to the broadband X-ray imaging spectroscopy aspect of Hitomi (ASTRO-H) with significantly higher angular resolution. The current design of FORCE defines energy band pass of 1-80 keV with angular resolution of <15" in half-power diameter, achieving a 10 times higher sensitivity above 10 keV compared to any previous missions with simultaneous soft X-ray coverage. Our primary scientific objective is to trace the cosmic formation history by searching for "missing black holes" in various mass-scales: "buried supermassive black holes (SMBHs)" (> 10(exp 4) Stellar Mass) residing in the center of galaxies in a cosmological distance, "intermediate-mass black holes" (10(exp 2)-(10(exp 4) Stellar Mass) acting as the possible seeds from which SMBHs grow, and "orphan stellar-mass black holes" (< 10(exp 2) Stellar Mass) without companion in our Galaxy. In addition to these missing BHs, hunting for the nature of relativistic particles at various astrophysical shocks is also in our scope, utilizing the broadband X-ray coverage with high angular-resolution. FORCE are going to open a new era in these fields. The satellite is proposed to be launched with the Epsilon vehicle that is a Japanese current solid-fuel rocket. FORCE carries three identical pairs of Super-mirror and wide-band X-ray detector. The focal length is currently planned to be 10 m. The silicon mirror with multi-layer coating is our primary choice to achieve lightweight, good angular optics. The detector is a descendant of hard X-ray imager onboard Hitomi (ASTRO-H) replacing its silicon strip detector with SOI-CMOS silicon pixel detector, allowing an extension of the low energy threshold down to 1 keV or even less.
Document ID
20170006057
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
External Source(s)
Authors
Mori, Koji
(Miyazaki Univ. Japan)
Tsuru, Takeshi Go
(Kyoto Univ. Kyoto, Japan)
Nakazawac, Kazuhiro
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Ueda, Yoshihiro
(Kyoto Univ. Kyoto, Japan)
Okajima, Takashi
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Murakami, Hiroshi
(Tohoku Gakuin Univ. Miyagi, Japan)
Awaki, Hisamitsu
(Ehime Univ. Japan)
Matsumoto, Hironori
(Nagoya Univ. Aichi, Japan)
Fukazawai, Yasushi
(Hiroshima Univ. Japan)
Tsunemi, Hiroshi
(Osaka Univ. Osaka, Japan)
Takahashi, Tadayuki
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Zhang, William W.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Date Acquired
July 3, 2017
Publication Date
August 1, 2016
Publication Information
Publication: SPIE Proceedings
Publisher: SPIE
Volume: 9905
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN43788
Meeting Information
Meeting: Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2016 Conference
Location: Edinburgh
Country: United Kingdom
Start Date: June 26, 2016
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
Hard X-ray
Broadband
Imaging spectroscopy
X-ray astronomy
Missions

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