Paper
8 September 2005 Recent results on manufacturing of segmented x-ray mirrors with slumped glass
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Abstract
Future X-ray missions are aiming at large mirror collecting areas of the order of several square meters. This is obtained with mirror assemblies composed of a large number of segments. The angular resolution of each one must be measured separately down to 1 arcsec. The mass limits imposed by the launchers require low weight and high stiffness materials. In this context we have focused our recent studies on the manufacturing of thin glass mirror segments. These mirrors are made from sheet glass which can be shaped in a high-precision slumping process to e.g. a Wolter-I figure. The excellent surface roughness of the sheet glass chosen is conserved during the slumping process and the final figure corrections with non-contacting tools. The influence of several parameters of the process, such as glass and mould material, heating and cooling, has been measured and controlled with adequate metrology. In this paper we describe our current efforts which are aiming at the production of a Wolter-I scaled demonstration model - preferentially with parabola and hyperbola in one piece - made of thin sheet glass.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Peter Friedrich, Bernd Aschenbach, Heinrich Bräuninger, Guenther Hasinger, Oberto Citterio, Mauro Ghigo, Francesco Mazzoleni, Giovanni Pareschi, Udo Dinger, Wilhelm Egle, and Axel Matthes "Recent results on manufacturing of segmented x-ray mirrors with slumped glass", Proc. SPIE 5900, Optics for EUV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Astronomy II, 59000W (8 September 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.617216
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KEYWORDS
Glasses

Mirrors

X-rays

Manufacturing

Ion beam finishing

Ceramics

Polishing

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