The Granat Satellite
GRANAT was a Russian dedicated X-ray/gamma ray astronomy mission in collaboration with other European countries. Launched on 1 December 1989, Granat operated for almost 9 years. After an initial period of pointed observations, Granat went into survey mode in September 1994.
Mission Characteristics
Lifetime : December 1, 1989 - November 27, 1998Energy Range : 2 keV - 100 MeV
Payload :
- Coded-mask X-ray telescope (SIGMA)
0.03-1.3 MeV, eff. area 800 cm2, FOV 5°x5° - Coded-mask X-ray telescope (ART-P)
4-60 keV, eff. area 1250 cm2, FOV 1.8°x1.8° - X-ray proportional counter spectrometer (ART-S)
3-100 keV, eff. area 2400 cm2 at 10 keV, FOV 2°x2° - All-sky monitor (WATCH)
6-120 keV, eff. area 45 cm2, FOV All-sky - Gamma-ray burst experiment (PHEBUS)
0.1-100 MeV, 6 units of 100 cm2 each, FOV All-sky - Gamma-ray burst experiment (KONUS-B)
0.02-8 MeV, 7 units of 315 cm2 each, FOV All-sky - Gamma-ray burst experiment (TOURNESOL)
0.002-20 MeV), FOV 5°x5°
- A very deep (more than 5 million sec.) imaging of the galactic center region.
- Discovery of electron-positron annihilation lines from the Galactic "micro-quasar" 1E1740-294 and the X-ray Nova Muscae.
- Study of spectra and time variability of black hole candidates.
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Last modified: Monday, 02-Aug-2004 14:07:48 EDT