Difference between revisions of "STIX Documentation"

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* STIX instrumentation paper:
 
* STIX instrumentation paper:
* The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) <br>
+
The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) <br>
 
Säm Krucker, G. J. Hurford, O. Grimm, S. Kögl, H.-P Gröbelbauer, L. Etesi, D. Casadei, A. Csillaghy, A. O. Benz, N. G. Arnold <br>
 
Säm Krucker, G. J. Hurford, O. Grimm, S. Kögl, H.-P Gröbelbauer, L. Etesi, D. Casadei, A. Csillaghy, A. O. Benz, N. G. Arnold <br>
 
A&A, 642 (2020) A15 <br>
 
A&A, 642 (2020) A15 <br>

Revision as of 10:22, 24 April 2023

1 STIX

The Spectrometer Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) on Solar Orbiter is a hard X-ray imaging spectrometer covering the energy range from 4 to 150 keV. STIX observes hard X-ray bremsstrahlung emissions from solar flares and therefore provides diagnostics of the hottest ('10 MK) flare plasma while quantifying the location, spectrum, and energy content of flare-accelerated nonthermal electrons.

To accomplish this, STIX applies an indirect bigrid Fourier imaging technique using a set of tungsten grids (at pitches from 0.038 to 1 mm) in front of 32 coarsely pixelated CdTe detectors to provide information on angular scales from 7 to 180 arcsec with 1 keV energy resolution (at 6 keV). The imaging concept of STIX has intrinsically low telemetry requirements and it is therefore well-suited to the limited resources available to the Solar Orbiter payload. To further reduce the downlinked data volume, STIX data are binned on board into 32 selectable energy bins and dynamically-adjusted time bins with a typical duration of 1 second during flares.

Through hard X-ray diagnostics, STIX provides critical information for understanding the acceleration of electrons at the Sun and their transport into interplanetary space and for determining the magnetic connection of Solar Orbiter back to the Sun. In this way, STIX serves to link Solar Orbiter’s remote and in-situ measurements.

1.1 Instrumentation

Details about the STIX instrumentation can be found in the following paper:

  • The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX)

Säm Krucker, G. J. Hurford, O. Grimm, S. Kögl, H.-P Gröbelbauer, L. Etesi, D. Casadei, A. Csillaghy, A. O. Benz, N. G. Arnold
A&A, 642 (2020) A15
Published online: 2020-09-30 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201937362


1.2 Tutorials

STIX tutorials are available at [1].

1.3 How to Cite Our Work

If you use STIX data in your research, please cite the following papers:

  • STIX instrumentation paper:

The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX)
Säm Krucker, G. J. Hurford, O. Grimm, S. Kögl, H.-P Gröbelbauer, L. Etesi, D. Casadei, A. Csillaghy, A. O. Benz, N. G. Arnold
A&A, 642 (2020) A15
Published online: 2020-09-30 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201937362


  • STIX data center paper:

The data center for the Spectrometer and Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) on board Solar Orbiter
Hualin Xiao, Shane Maloney, Säm Krucker, Ewan Dickson, Paolo Massa, et al.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202346031