ESA optics engineer Eric Wille explains the origin of silicon pore optics, the new optical technology underpinning Europe’s Athena space observatory to observe the hot, high-energy cosmos.
Polishing and stacking together silicon wafers – normally used to manufacture integrated circuits – allows the focusing of X-rays to see far further into space. ESA shares the patent for this technology with Cosine Research, the Dutch company currently developing it.
The mission launch is 12 years away, but work von preparing its silicon pore optics module is already well underway.
Find out more:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Engineering_Technology/Talking_technology/Catching_X-rays_in_stacked_silicon
More Talking Technology:
http://www.esa.int/talkingtechnology
Polishing and stacking together silicon wafers – normally used to manufacture integrated circuits – allows the focusing of X-rays to see far further into space. ESA shares the patent for this technology with Cosine Research, the Dutch company currently developing it.
The mission launch is 12 years away, but work von preparing its silicon pore optics module is already well underway.
Find out more:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Engineering_Technology/Talking_technology/Catching_X-rays_in_stacked_silicon
More Talking Technology:
http://www.esa.int/talkingtechnology
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