SAX: The mission



next previous up
Next: Project Organization Up: SAX Home Page

In the Universe there are many phenomena that generate X-rays. However, the Earth atmosphere completely absorbs this radiation from space, and thus systems to detect it have had to be flown above the atmosphere.

Only since the early 1960s it has been possible to identify cosmic X-ray sources, first by using X-ray detectors on-board rockets and, later, satellites.

Early pioneering X-ray investigations utilized very small spacecrafts, such as SAS-1 and SAS-2. Second generation X-ray satellites, like the American HEAO-1 and Einstein, and the European EXOSAT, transmitted the first images of X-ray cosmic sources.

The Italian-Dutch SAX Satellite, successfully launched on April 30 1996, is intended as a bridge between the second generation satellites and the third generation which will be established with NASA's Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility (AXAF) and ESA's X-ray Multi Mirror (XMM) satellites.

It is the first X-ray mission (and, of the coming near-future satellites, the only one) that has the capability of observing sources over more than three decades of energy - from 0.1 to 300 keV - with a relatively large area, a good energy resolution, associated with imaging capabilities (resolution of about 1') in the range of 0.1 - 10 keV.

Acknowledgements

Most of the material used in these documents comes from the Alenia's Brochure `SAX: X-ray Astronomy Satellite'. We thank Alenia, in the person of Dr. Attiná for the permission of using and distributing it.

Note for the Reader

The best way to read the documents is by using a browser that supports tables and anchors in table cells. For all other people there are pre-formatted versions of the tables.


Contents

+ Project Organization
+ Program Participants
+ Scientific Goals
+ Scientific Program
+ Satellite Description (with an exploded view of the SAX subsystems)
o The X-ray Measuring Instruments
o The Satellite Subsystems
+ Operational Features
+ Launch Description
+ Major System Data
+ Bibliography

This file was last modified on Thursday, 04-Nov-1999 08:34:11 CET by Mauro Orlandini


next previous up
Next: Project Organization Up: SAX Home Page