Astro B was the second Japanese X-ray astronomysatellite. After launch on February 20, 1983, it was renamed Tenma (Japanese
for "Pegasus"). Tenma carried GSFC detectors which had an improved energy
resolution (by a factor of 2) compared to proportional counters and
performed the first sensitive measurements of the iron spectral
region for many astronomical objects.
Mission Characteristics
Lifetime :
February 20, 1983 - November, 22 1985 Energy Range :
0.1 keV - 60 keV Payload :
Gas Scintillator Proportional Counter:
10 units of 80 cm2 each, FOV ~ 3deg (FWHM), 2 - 60 keV
X-ray focusing collector:
2 units of 7 cm2 each, 0.1 -2 keV
Transient Source Monitor: 2 - 10 keV
Radiation Belt Monitor/Gamma-ray burst detector
Science Highlights:
Discovery of the Iron helium-like emission from the galactic ridge
Iron line discovery and/or study in many LMXRB, HMXRB and AGN
Discovery of an absorption line at 4 keV in the X1636-536
Burst spectra
Archive: Not Available at HEASARC (http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/ginga/archive/ginga_archive.html)
Imagine the Universe is a service of the High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC), Dr. Nicholas White (Director), within the Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
Do you have a comment or question about this CD-ROM? Please send e-mail to itu@athena.gsfc.nasa.gov.
External links contain material that we found to be relevant. However they're not maintained by us and the content may have changed. If you find any external links that contain inappropriate material, please let us know by sending an e-mail to itu@athena.gsfc.nasa.gov.