H. Wende’s research while affiliated with University of Tübingen and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (6)


Figure 5: The cumulative flare frequency (in s −1 ) versus U-band flare energy (in ergs) for G and M-type dwarfs. M dwarf data compiled from Moffett (1974), Doyle & Mathioudakis (1990), Dal & Evren (2011), Hilton (2011), and Hawley et al. (2014). Solar data compiled from Shibayama (2013) and Kretzschmar (2011). G dwarf data from Shibayama et al. (2013). See Ramsay & Doyle (2015) for more details. 
Figure 1: X-ray spectrum of the impulsive phase of a solar flare as observed by RHESSI, showing the thermal component which dominates the soft X-ray band below ∼15 keV and the nonthermal component at higher energies (taken from Benz & Güdel 2010).  
Figure 2: The Swift XRT soft Xray (0.3–10 keV) light curve of the flare of DG CVn on 2014 April 23 (blue points correspond to XRT data in WT mode, red points to data in PC mode; from Kowalski et al. 2015). The peak X-ray flux corresponds to 5 × 10 −9 erg cm −2 s −1 .  
The LOFT mission concept: a status update
  • Conference Paper
  • Full-text available

July 2016

·

731 Reads

·

19 Citations

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

M. Feroci

·

E. Bozzo

·

·

[...]

·

F. Zwart

The Large Observatory For x-ray Timing (LOFT) is a mission concept which was proposed to ESA as M3 and M4 candidate in the framework of the Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 program. Thanks to the unprecedented combination of effective area and spectral resolution of its main instrument and the uniquely large field of view of its wide field monitor, LOFT will be able to study the behaviour of matter in extreme conditions such as the strong gravitational field in the innermost regions close to black holes and neutron stars and the supra-nuclear densities in the interiors of neutron stars. The science payload is based on a Large Area Detector (LAD, >8m² effective area, 2-30 keV, 240 eV spectral resolution, 1 degree collimated field of view) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM, 2-50 keV, 4 steradian field of view, 1 arcmin source location accuracy, 300 eV spectral resolution). The WFM is equipped with an on-board system for bright events (e.g., GRB) localization. The trigger time and position of these events are broadcast to the ground within 30 s from discovery. In this paper we present the current technical and programmatic status of the mission.

Download

Figure 4. The WFM electrical architecture showing the 10 cameras and their Back-End Electronics on the left as well as the power and data connections to the Instrument Control Unit holding the DHU, PDU and the Mass Memory. 
The digital data processing concepts of the LOFT mission

August 2014

·

179 Reads

·

1 Citation

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

The Large Observatory for X-ray Timing (LOFT) is one of the five mission candidates that were considered by ESA for an M3 mission (with a launch opportunity in 2022 - 2024). LOFT features two instruments: the Large Area Detector (LAD) and the Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a 10 m 2 -class instrument with approximately 15 times the collecting area of the largest timing mission so far (RXTE) for the first time combined with CCD-class spectral resolution. The WFM will continuously monitor the sky and recognise changes in source states, detect transient and bursting phenomena and will allow the mission to respond to this. Observing the brightest X-ray sources with the effective area of the LAD leads to enormous data rates that need to be processed on several levels, filtered and compressed in real-time already on board. The WFM data processing on the other hand puts rather low constraints on the data rate but requires algorithms to find the photon interaction location on the detector and then to deconvolve the detector image in order to obtain the sky coordinates of observed transient sources. In the following, we want to give an overview of the data handling concepts that were developed during the study phase.


The Large Observatory For x-ray Timing

September 2012

·

426 Reads

·

221 Citations

Experimental Astronomy

The LOFT mission concept is one of four candidates selected by ESA for the M3 launch opportunity as Medium Size missions of the Cosmic Vision programme. The launch window is currently planned for between 2022 and 2024. LOFT is designed to exploit the diagnostics of rapid X-ray flux and spectral variability that directly probe the motion of matter down to distances very close to black holes and neutron stars, as well as the physical state of ultra-dense matter. These primary science goals will be addressed by a payload composed of a Large Area Detector (LAD) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a collimated (<1 degree field of view) experiment operating in the energy range 2-50 keV, with a 10 m^2 peak effective area and an energy resolution of 260 eV at 6 keV. The WFM will operate in the same energy range as the LAD, enabling simultaneous monitoring of a few-steradian wide field of view, with an angular resolution of <5 arcmin. The LAD and WFM experiments will allow us to investigate variability from submillisecond QPO's to year-long transient outbursts. In this paper we report the current status of the project.


A digital data processing unit for future X-ray observatories

September 2012

·

13 Reads

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Future space-based X-ray observatories will not only have increased sensitivity and energy resolution but will provide astronomers with high time resolution in the order of microseconds. The detection of millions of single photons per second with their precise energy and their time of arrival will produce unprecedented data rates that cannot be downlinked to Earth in their full extend due to telemetry limitations. We present the study of a very fast, lossless, on-board data compression implemented in an FPGA-based LEON3 microprocessor. We conclude with performance estimates done with a prototype board developed for the High Time Resolution Spectrometer (HTRS) on board the International X-ray Observatory (IXO). We also discuss a possible application of the Data Processing Unit (DPU) for the future X-ray mission Large Observatory for X-ray Timing (LOFT).



Citations (3)


... We stress that this is a promising approach for the availability of actual and also near-future more accurate observational data (see e.g., Refs. [39][40][41][42]). In this section, we first describe how to distinguish between a BH and the presence of a WH (see Sec. III A). ...

Reference:

Epicyclic frequencies in the equatorial plane around stationary and axially symmetric wormhole geometries
The LOFT mission concept: a status update

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

... This gave rise to the development of large-area silicon drift detector (LASDD), often exploiting the whole usable area of the high-resistivity silicon wafer, allowing for large-scale applications of SDD at accelerators as, for instance, is described in Piemonte et al. (2006), Rashevsky et al. (2001), Bonvicini et al. (2000), Alessandro et al. (2010), and Gatti and Rehak (2005). As a consequence of the achieved energy resolution for low-energy X-rays, which is due to the highly refined detector design and the quality of the production technology (Zampa et al., 2007;Zampa et al., 2011), the LASDD was subsequently also proposed to be applied in ongoing space missions (Feroci et al., 2012), and those are at present in their realization phase (Zhang et al., 2016;Zhang et al., 2019;Wilson-Hodge et al., 2017). This progression is illustrated in some detail in Vacchi (2023). ...

The Large Observatory For x-ray Timing

Experimental Astronomy