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AGILE

The Astro-rivelatore Gamma a Immagini Leggero (AGILE)
is a gamma-ray astronomy mission operated by ASI (Italian
Space Agency). It was launched on April 23, 2007 from Satish Dhawan Space
Centre in India. The original plan called for a three year mission, but the
satellite operated for 17 years and ceased the scientific observations on Jan 18, 2024.
It was launched
into a near-equatorial orbit, giving it a good observational vantage on
terrestrial gamma-ray flashes from thunderstorms and intense atmospheric
electrical activity, in addition to its astrophysics observations.
Mission Characteristics
Lifetime : April 23, 2007 – Jan 18,2024
Energy Range : 15 keV – 50 GeV
Special Features : Extremely rapid gamma-ray burst alerts,
with initial estimated events announced within an hour of observation, and a
refined alert within 3 to 3.5 hours. The rapid trigger systems have also
proven useful for detecting terrestrial gamma-ray sources from thunderstorms,
which are more common in the equatorial region over which the
satellite orbits.
Payload :
- SuperAGILE, a coded mask imager hard X-ray detector with silicon microstrip detectors,
sensitive to 15–45 keV with a wide field of view and 6 arcminute
one dimensional resolution: microstrips mounted perpendicularly provide two-dimensional
source placement. Because celestial gamma-ray sources frequently have small photon counts
and considerable angular confusion, a co-observing hard X-ray detector such as SuperAGILE
is often vital to source identification.
- The Gamma-Ray Imaging Detector (GRID) which contains a silicon-tungten tracker,
anticoincidence system, and a cesium iodide calorimeter (see below).
The tracker consists of a set of
two-layer silicon microstrip detectors, interleaved with
tungsten foil: gamma rays strike the tungsten, converting into electron/positron pairs
which are followed by the microstrips to reconstruct the incident gamma ray’s
direction. It is sensitive to 30 MeV–50 GeV.
- The MiniCalorimeter, which is part of the GRID instrument, but can operate independently
as need. It contains perpendicular pairs of CsI scintillating bars and operates in the
energy range 350 keV–100 MeV.
[AGILE at ASI (Italy)]
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Page authors: Lorella Angelini Jesse Allen
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Last modified: Friday, 26-Jan-2024 11:33:18 EST
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