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Solar X-Ray Spectrometer, or SOXS, was an experimental payload launched onboard Indian geostationary satellite GSAT-2 by the Indian Space Research Organisation, ISRO. SOXS collected data about X-ray emissions from solar flares with high energy and temporal resolutions.[1][2]
Features
edit- X-Ray Spectrometer (SOXS) was flown onboard GSAT-2 on 8-May-2003.
- SOXS employs Si and CZT semiconductor devices, which are extremely high resolution and low noise detectors.
- Detector package is mounted on a Sun Pointing Mechanism with tracking accuracy better than 0.1 degree.
- Pulse Height (PHA) measurements in 256 channels.
- System Dead Time- 16 microseconds for Si Pin and 13 microseconds for CZT.
- Energy window counters.
- On board calibration using Cd109 Radio isotope.
- System Health Parameters Monitoring.
- Onboard selection for Background Rejection (LLD/Threshold).
- In view of Temperature sensitivity of the detectors, observational interval is < 3 Hrs starting from 04:00 to 06:45 UT.
- Block Schematics of SLD Payload (SLED, SFE, SLE and SCE)
- SSTM Daily Tracking (0 to 189 degrees)[3]
References
edit- ^ "SOXS Instruments" (PDF). Shodhganga. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ^ http://cdaw.gsfc.nasa.gov/publications/ilws_goa2006/054_Jain.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ and L. Bharti, R. Jain, N. J. Bhatt. "Solar X-ray Spectrometer (SOXS) mission:Observations and new results" (PDF). nasa.gov. NASA. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
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