The INTEGRAL mission

Autor: G. Vedrenne, A. J. Dean, W. Hermsen, Niels Lund, Christoph Winkler, Bonnard J. Teegarden, Neil Gehrels, P. Ubertini, R. A. Sunyaev, J. A. Paul, A. Giménez, J. M. Mas-Hesse, V. Schönfelder, Thierry J.-L. Courvoisier, G. Di Cocco, Francois Lebrun, J. P. Roques, S. A. Grebenev, Giorgio G. C. Palumbo, Herbert W. Schnopper
Rok vydání: 2003
Předmět:
Zdroj: Astronomy & Astrophysics. 411:L1-L6
ISSN: 1432-0746
0004-6361
Popis: The ESA observatory INTEGRAL (International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory) is dedicated to the fine spectroscopy (2.5 keV FWHM @ 1 MeV) and fine imaging (angular resolution: 12 arcmin FWHM) of celestial gamma-ray sources in the energy range 15 keV to 10 MeV with concurrent source monitoring in the X-ray ( keV) and optical (V -band, 550 nm) energy ranges. INTEGRAL carries two main gamma-ray instruments, the spectrometer SPI (Vedrenne et al. [CITE]) – optimized for the high-resolution gamma-ray line spectroscopy (20 keV–8 MeV), and the imager IBIS (Ubertini et al. [CITE]) – optimized for high-angular resolution imaging (15 keV–10 MeV). Two monitors, JEM-X (Lund et al. [CITE]) in the () keV X-ray band, and OMC (Mas-Hesse et al. [CITE]) in optical Johnson V -band complement the payload. The ground segment includes the Mission Operations Centre at ESOC, ESA and NASA ground stations, the Science Operations Centre at ESTEC and the Science Data Centre near Geneva. INTEGRAL was launched on 17 October 2002. The observing programme is well underway and sky exposure (until June 2003) reaches ~1800 ks in the Galactic plane. The prospects are excellent for the scientific community to observe the high energy sky using state-of-the-art gamma-ray imaging and spectroscopy. This paper presents a high-level overview of INTEGRAL.
Databáze: OpenAIRE