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Why Do X-Ray Mirrors Look So Unusual?
Does the object in this image look like a mirror? Maybe not, but thatβs exactly what it is! To be more precise, itβs a set of mirrors that will be used on an X-ray telescope. But why does it look nothing like the mirrors youβre familiar with? To answer that, letβs first take a step back. Letβs talk telescopes.
How does a telescope work?
The basic function of a telescope is to gather and focus light to amplify the lightβs source. Astronomers have used telescopes for centuries, and there are a few different designs. Today, most telescopes use curved mirrors that magnify and focus light from distant objects onto your eye, a camera, or some other instrument. The mirrors can be made from a variety of materials, including glass or metal.
Space telescopes like the James Webb and Hubble Space Telescopes use large mirrors to focus light from some of the most distant objects in the sky. However, the mirrors must be tailored for the type and range of light the telescope is going to captureβand X-rays are especially hard to catch.
X-rays versus mirrors
X-rays tend to zip through most things. This is because X-rays have much smaller wavelengths than most other types of light. In fact, X-rays can be smaller than a single atom of almost every element. When an X-ray encounters some surfaces, it can pass right between the atoms!
Doctors use this property of X-rays to take pictures of whatβs inside you. They use a beam of X-rays that mostly passes through skin and muscle but is largely blocked by denser materials, like bone. The shadow of what was blocked shows up on the film.
This tendency to pass through things includes most mirrors. If you shoot a beam of X-rays into a standard telescope, most of the light would go right through or be absorbed. The X-rays wouldnβt be focused by the mirror, and we wouldnβt be able to study them.
X-rays can bounce off a specially designed mirror, one turned on its side so that the incoming X-rays arrive almost parallel to the surface and glance off it. At this shallow angle, the space between atoms in the mirror's surface shrinks so much that X-rays can't sneak through. The light bounces off the mirror like a stone skipping on water. This type of mirror is called a grazing incidence mirror.
A metallic onion
Telescope mirrors curve so that all of the incoming light comes to the same place. Mirrors for most telescopes are based on the same 3D shape β a paraboloid. You might remember the parabola from your math classes as the cup-shaped curve. A paraboloid is a 3D version of that, spinning it around the axis, a little like the nose cone of a rocket. This turns out to be a great shape for focusing light at a point.
Mirrors for visible and infrared light and dishes for radio light use the βcupβ portion of that paraboloid. For X-ray astronomy, we cut it a little differently to use the wall. Same shape, different piece. The mirrors for visible, infrared, ultraviolet, and radio telescopes look like a gently-curving cup. The X-ray mirror looks like a cylinder with very slightly angled walls.
The image below shows how different the mirrors look. On the left is one of the Chandra X-ray Observatoryβs cylindrical mirrors. On the right you can see the gently curved round primary mirror for the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy telescope.
If we use just one grazing incidence mirror in an X-ray telescope, there would be a big hole, as shown above (left). Weβd miss a lot of X-rays! Instead, our mirror makers fill in that cylinder with layers and layers of mirrors, like an onion. Then we can collect more of the X-rays that enter the telescope, giving us more light to study.
Nested mirrors like this have been used in many X-ray telescopes. Above is a close-up of the mirrors for an upcoming observatory called the X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission (XRISM, pronounced βcrismβ), which is a Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)-led international collaboration between JAXA, NASA, and the European Space Agency (ESA).
The XRISM mirror assembly uses thin, gold-coated mirrors to make them super reflective to X-rays. Each of the two assemblies has 1,624 of these layers packed in them. And each layer is so smooth that the roughest spots rise no more than one millionth of a millimeter.
Why go to all this trouble to collect this elusive light? X-rays are a great way to study the hottest and most energetic areas of the universe! For example, at the centers of certain galaxies, there are black holes that heat up gas, producing all kinds of light. The X-rays can show us light emitted by material just before it falls in.
Stay tuned to NASA Universe on Twitter and Facebook to keep up with the latest on XRISM and other X-ray observatories.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space!
President Biden's statement regarding the passing of Nichelle Nichols
Nichelle Nichols has passed away.Β
Martin Luther King once convinced her to continue on as Uhura when she was about to quit. He told her how she was a role model for so many people and had to stay on. He rightfully recognized her as a trailblazer and the inspiration she continued to be.Β
(Second picture is Nichols participating in a recruitment program for NASA in late 70s/early 80β²s, aimed at women and people of color. The third picture is Nichols onboard the stratospheric observatory for infrafred astronomy in 2017, as one of the first non essential personell to be able to do so)Β

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Appreciation post for Mrs. Nichols aka my woman crush! Sheβs such a beautiful lady!
Nichelle Nichols by Robin Damore
Rest in peace beautiful Nichelle.Β Β
Born: December 28, 1932, Robbins, IL
Died: July 30, 2022
Put God Firstβ¦
Deuteronomy 6:5 You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.
Matthew 6:33 βBut seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.β
Proverbs 16:3 Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established.
Matthew 6:24 βNo one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.β
No. Back-interesting flush, right?
Nelson George, NYC. introduced me to bohemian!!

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Break the cycle
Sharon Farmer, Beatrice Fergerson, age 97, Washington, DC, 1990
βToday we owe you. You come and save our lives, the lives of our kids. We truly thank you for that.ββChamudi, Zevulun Military Security Coordinator We all want our children to learn in peace and safety. In Israel, that means that bomb shelters must ...
Bee Safe Storage - Google Search
Jotting and Dotting π¦₯ππππ¦

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The Church Has Left The Building S1E1: Production Schedule (Pilot)
(via https://youtube.com/watch?v=EvTfUskpeyU&feature=share)