12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

The Compton Spectrometer and Imager Project for MeV Astronomy

20 Jul 2021, 18:00
1h 30m
05

05

Talk GAD | Gamma Ray Direct Discussion

Speaker

John Tomsick (UC Berkeley)

Description

The Compton Spectrometer and Imager (COSI) is a 0.2-5 MeV Compton telescope capable of imaging, spectroscopy, and polarimetry of astrophysical sources. Such capabilities are made possible by COSI's germanium cross-strip detectors, which provide high efficiency, high resolution spectroscopy and precise 3D positioning of photon interactions. Science goals for COSI include studies of 511 keV emission from antimatter annihilation in the Galaxy, mapping radioactive elements from nucleosynthesis, determining emission mechanisms and source geometries with polarization, and detecting and localizing multimessenger sources. The instantaneous field of view for the germanium detectors is 25% of the sky, and they are surrounded on the sides and bottom by active shields, providing background rejection as well as allowing for detection of gamma-ray bursts or other gamma-ray flares over most of the sky. We are currently carrying out a Phase A concept study to consider COSI as a Small Explorer (SMEX) satellite mission (see arXiv:1908.04334), and I will discuss the advances COSI-SMEX provides for astrophysics in the MeV bandpass.

Keywords

MeV gamma-rays; Compton telescopes; positron annihilation; nucleosynthesis; polarization; satellite missions

Subcategory Future projects
Collaboration other (fill field below)
other Collaboration COSI

Primary authors

Presentation materials