The Enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry (eXTP) mission is a flagship astronomy mission led by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and scheduled for launch in 2029. The Large Area Detector (LAD) is one of the instruments on board eXTP and is dedicated to studying the timing of X-ray sources with unprecedented sensitivity. The development of the eXTP LAD involves a significant mass production of elements to be deployed in a significant number of countries (Italy, Austria, Germany, Poland, China, Czech Republic, France). This feature makes the Manufacturing, Assembly, Integration and Test (MAIT), Verification and Calibration the most challenging and critical tasks of the project. An optimized Flight Model (FM) implementation plan has been drawn up, aiming at a production rate of 2 Modules per week. This plan is based on the interleaving of a series of parallel elementary activities in order to make the most efficient use of time and resources and to ensure that the schedule is met.
The Large Area Detector (LAD) is the high-throughput, spectral-timing instrument onboard the eXTP mission, a flagship mission of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the China National Space Administration, with a large European participation coordinated by Italy and Spain. The eXTP mission is currently performing its phase B study, with a target launch at the end-2027. The eXTP scientific payload includes four instruments (SFA, PFA, LAD and WFM) offering unprecedented simultaneous wide-band X-ray timing and polarimetry sensitivity. The LAD instrument is based on the design originally proposed for the LOFT mission. It envisages a deployed 3.2 m2 effective area in the 2-30 keV energy range, achieved through the technology of the large-area Silicon Drift Detectors - offering a spectral resolution of up to 200 eV FWHM at 6 keV - and of capillary plate collimators - limiting the field of view to about 1 degree. In this paper we will provide an overview of the LAD instrument design, its current status of development and anticipated performance.
A space mission called “Earth 2.0 (ET)” is being developed in China to address a few of fundamental questions in the exoplanet field: How frequently habitable Earth-like planets orbit solar type stars (Earth 2.0s)? How do terrestrial planets form and evolve? Where did floating planets come from? ET consists of six 30 cm diameter transit telescope systems with each field of view of 500 square degrees and one 35 cm diameter microlensing telescope with a field of view of 4 square degrees. The ET transit mode will monitor ~1.2M FGKM dwarfs in the original Kepler field and its neighboring fields continuously for four years while the microlensing mode monitors over 30M I< 20.6 stars in the Galactic bulge direction. ET will merge its photometry data with that from Kepler to increase the time baseline to 8 years. This enhances the transit signal-to-noise ratio, reduce false positives, and greatly increases the chance to discover Earth 2.0s. Simulations show that ET transit telescopes will be able to identify ~17 Earth 2.0s, about 4,900 Earth-sized terrestrial planets and about 29,000 new planets. In addition, ET will detect about 2,000 transit-timingvariation (TTV) planets and 700 of them will have mass and eccentricity measurements. The ET microlensing telescope will be able to identify over 1,000 microlensing planets. With simultaneous observations with the ground-based KMTNet telescopes, ET will be able to measure masses of over 300 microlensing planets and determine the mass distribution functions of free-floating planets and cold planets. ET will be operated at the Earth-Sun L2 orbit with a designed lifetime longer than 4 years.
The Earth 2.0 (ET) mission is a Chinese next generation space mission designed to find thousands of terrestrial-like planets including habitable Earth-like planets orbiting solar type stars (Earth 2.0s) through the transiting method, and cold and free-floating low-mass planets through the microlensing method. The mission will monitor 1.2M FGKM dwarf stars for patterns of transits with a differential photometry precision of 34 ppm for a G = 13.5 mag solar type star in a 6.5-hr exposure. ET will be operated at the Earth-Sun L2 halo orbit with a designed lifetime longer than 4 years. To increase the probability of discovering Earth 2.0s, wide field-of-view (FoV) and ultra-high photometry precision are two key features of this mission. The wide field transiting telescope design offers 500 square degrees of FOV. High photometry precision is achieved by the scientific payload design as well as high stable spacecraft pointing in both short term (jitters) and long-term (drifts). According to our photometry simulations and analysis, the ET spacecraft stability requirement is not the usual relative pointing error (RPE) applied in most space missions, but the forward sum stability, in which both high frequency jitters and low frequency drifts are critical for high precision photometry measurements. Therefore, the spacecraft design needs to not only deal with high frequency jitters, but also the thermal-elastic effects of scientific payloads, including long-term thermal stability of the telescope structure, cameras, fine guiding camera, and mounting plate. This paper presents the pointing stability definition suitable for the ET mission. Simulations of high precision photometry observations with different pointing stability scenarios are presented. Approaches to the high stability are also discussed.
The Earth 2.0 (ET) mission is a Chinese next-generation space mission to detect thousands of Earth-sized terrestrial planets, including habitable Earth-like planets orbiting solar type stars (Earth 2.0s), cold low-mass planets, and freefloating planets. To meet the scientific goals, the ET spacecraft will carry six 30 cm diameter transit telescopes with each field of view of 500 square degrees, and one 35 cm diameter microlensing telescope with a field of view of 4 square degrees, monitor ~1.2M FGKM dwarfs in the original Kepler field and its neighboring fields continuously while monitoring over 30M stars in the Galactic bulge direction. The high precision transit observations require high photometry precision and pointing stability, which is the key drive for the ET spacecraft design. In this paper, details of the overall mission modeling and analysis will be presented. The spacecraft orbit, pointing strategy, stability requirements are presented, as well as the space-ground communication analysis. The ET spacecraft adopts an ultra-high photometry precision & high stable platform, largely inherited from other space science missions. The preliminary design of spacecraft which meets mission requirements is introduced, including the spacecraft overall configuration, observation modes, avionics architecture and development plan, which pays great attention to the pointing stability and huge volume science telemetry download.
The enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry Observatory (eXTP) is a flagship international collaboration mission led by Chinese Academy of Sciences, with a large contribution from more than 20 European institutes. eXTP mission is designed to study the equation of state of ultra-dense matter under extreme conditions of strong density, gravity and magnetic field. The satellite carries four main instruments, including the Spectroscopy Focusing Array (SFA), the Large Area Detector (LAD), the Polarimetry Focusing array (PFA) and the Wide Field Monitor (WFM), enabling simultaneous spectral-timing-polarimetry studies of celestial sources in the energy range from 0.5-30 keV. The satellite will fly at a near-zero-inclination Low Earth Orbit, and is featured with long-time steady high-precision coaxial pointing, near realtime burst alert distribution, and follow-up maneuver capabilities. This paper describes the primary mission requirements and constraints, and presents an overall mission analysis including orbit analysis, pointing strategy, and board-ground communications, etc. The preliminary design of eXTP satellite is also introduced, including satellite overall configuration, observation modes, avionics architecture and development plan.
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