List of X-ray space telescopes

X-ray telescopes are designed to observe the x-ray region of the electromagnetic spectrum. X-rays from outer space cannot be observed from the ground due to absorption by the atmosphere, and so x-ray telescopes must be launched into orbit. Their mirrors require a very low angle of reflection (typically 10 arc-minutes to 2 degrees).[1] These are called glancing (or grazing) incidence mirrors. In 1952, Hans Wolter outlined three ways a telescope could be built using only this kind of mirror.[2][3]

Space-borne observatories and instruments

This list contains space-borne observatories as well as X-ray instruments as part of a larger mission, both past, present and in the proposal stage.

NameLaunchNotes
Ariel 51974
Ariel 61979
ASCA1993
ATHENA
Under development
AGILE2007
Apollo Telescope Mount1973Part of Skylab, operated 1973-1974
Arcus
Proposal, not selected for launch in 2019
ALEXIS1993
ANS1974
Astrosat2015
BeppoSAX1996
BBXRT1990
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory1991
Chandra X-ray Observatory1999
Constellation-X Observatory
2008 proposal, merged into the International X-ray Observatory proposal
Copernicus1972
Cos-B1975
DXS1993
Einstein Observatory1978originally HEAO-2
EXOSAT1983
Fermi2008
Ginga1987
Granat1989
Gravity and Extreme Magnetism
2012 proposal
Hakucho1979
Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope2017
HEAO-11977
HEAO 31979
High Energy Transient Explorer1996
Hinode2006
Hinotori1981Originally ASTRO-A
Hitomi2016Originally ASTRO-H
IXPE
Under development
INTEGRAL2002
International X-ray Observatory
2012 proposal, now part of ATHENA
LOFT
Proposal
MAXI2009
Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory2004Originally Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission[4]
NICER2017
NuSTAR2012
OAO-11966
ORBIS
Under development
OSO 71971
OSO 81975
RHESSI2002
ROSAT1990
RXTE1995
SAS-31975
SVOM
Proposal
Spektr-RG2019
Suzaku2005
Tenma1983
Uhuru1970
Vela1963
XRISM2022Under development
XEUS
Proposal, merged into the International X-ray Observatory proposal, now part of the ATHENA proposal
XMM-Newton1999
XPoSat2021Planned, under development
Yohkoh1991

High-altitude atmospheric observatories and instruments

Sometimes X-Ray observations are made from a near-space environment on sounding rockets or high-altitude balloons.

See also

References

  1. Kulinder Pal Singh. "Techniques in X-ray Astronomy" (pdf).
  2. Wolter, H. (1952). "Glancing Incidence Mirror Systems as Imaging Optics for X-rays". Annalen der Physik. 10: 94. Bibcode:1952AnP...445...94W. doi:10.1002/andp.19524450108.
  3. Wolter, H. (1952). "A Generalized Schwarzschild Mirror System For Use at Glancing Incidence for X-ray Imaging". Annalen der Physik. 10: 286. Bibcode:1952AnP...445..286W. doi:10.1002/andp.19524450410.
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