All-Sky Monitor (ASM) The All-Sky Monitor (ASM) provided all-sky X-ray coverage, to a sensitivity of a few percent of the
Crab Nebula intensity in one day, in order to provide both flare alarms and long-term intensity records of celestial X-ray sources. The ASM consisted of three wide-angle shadow cameras equipped with proportional counters with a total collecting area of . The instrumental properties were: • Energy range: 2–12-keV; • Time resolution: observes 80% of the sky every 90 minutes; • Spatial resolution: 3' × 15'; • Number of shadow cameras: 3, each with 6° × 90° FoV; • Collecting area: ; • Detector:
Xenon proportional counter, position-sensitive; • Sensitivity: 30
mCrab. It was built by the CSR at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The
principal investigator was Dr. Hale Bradt.
High Energy X-ray Timing Experiment (HEXTE) The High-Energy X-ray Timing Experiment (HEXTE) is a scintillator array for the study of temporal and temporal/spectral effects of the hard X-ray (20 to 200 keV) emission from galactic and extragalactic sources. The HEXTE consisted of two clusters each containing four
phoswich scintillation detectors. Each cluster could "rock" (beam switch) along mutually orthogonal directions to provide background measurements 1.5° or 3.0° away from the source every 16 to 128 seconds. In addition, the input was sampled at 8
microseconds so as to detect time-varying phenomena. Automatic gain control was provided by using an radioactive source mounted in each detector's field of view. The HEXTE's basic properties were: • Energy range: 15–250 keV; • Energy resolution: 15% at 60 keV; • Time sampling: 8 microseconds; • Field of view: 1°
FWHM; • Detectors: 2 clusters of 4 NaI/CsI
scintillation counters; • Collecting area: 2 × ; • Sensitivity: 1-Crab = 360 count/second per HEXTE cluster; • Background: 50 count/second per HEXTE cluster. The HEXTE was designed and built by the Center for Astrophysics & Space Sciences (CASS) at the
University of California, San Diego. The HEXTE principal investigator was Dr. Richard E. Rothschild.
Proportional Counter Array (PCA) The Proportional Counter Array (PCA) provides approximately of X-ray detector area, in the energy range 2 to 60 keV, for the study of temporal/spectral effects in the X-ray emission from galactic and extragalactic sources. The PCA was an array of five proportional counters with a total collecting area of . The instrumental properties were: • Energy range: 2–60 keV; • Energy resolution: <18% at 6 keV; • Time resolution: 1 μs • Spatial resolution: collimator with 1° (FWHM); • Detectors: 5 proportional counters; • Collecting area: ; • Layers: 1
propane veto; 3
Xenon, each split into two; 1 Xenon veto layer; • Sensitivity: 0.1-mCrab; • Background: 90-mCrab. The PCA is being built by the Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics (LHEA) at
Goddard Space Flight Center. The principal investigator was
Jean Swank. == Results ==