@inproceedings{7f5a51f9442c4b029e19db29275d4882,
title = "BlackCAT: An Upcoming Soft X-ray Coded Aperture Telescope on a 6U CubeSat",
abstract = "The BlackCAT CubeSat is an X-ray coded-aperture-telescope observatory that is expected to launch in 2025. It is designed for observations of bright X-ray sources in the 0.5-20 keV band. The instrument will have a wide field of view (0.85 steradian) and be capable of catching gamma ray bursts (GRBs) from the distant universe, galactic transients, and flares from blazars, while monitoring the X-ray sky. In addition to the primary high-redshift GRB science, BlackCAT can monitor known source variability and search for rare and exciting events including gravitational-wave X-ray counterparts, magnetar flares, supernova shock breakouts, and tidal disruption events. The mission will thus function as a multiwavelength and multi-messenger complement to present and future facilities including LIGO, VIRGO, KAGRA, IceCube, KM3NET, LSST, LOFAR, SKA, and CTA. Rapid notifications of burst positions will be transmitted to the ground via satellite network and then relayed to the GCN. The name BlackCAT is derived from its scientific emphasis on black-hole-related transient events being observed with a coded aperture telescope (CAT). BlackCAT will serve as the scientific payload aboard a commercial 6U CubeSat spacecraft provided by NanoAvionics US. Novel event-driven X-ray hybrid CMOS detectors will form the focal plane array. In addition to carrying out science programs related to distant GRBs, transients, and X-ray sky monitoring, BlackCAT will also serve as a pathfinder for future economical missions combining multiple BlackCAT modules on either a single small satellite or on multiple CubeSats. BlackCAT will also serve as a platform for new X-ray hybrid CMOS detector development. An overview of BlackCAT in its current development state and its current status will be presented.",
author = "Falcone, {Abraham D.} and Colosimo, {Joseph M.} and Mitchell Wages and Michael Betts and Bevidas, {William A.} and Brynn Bortree and Buffington, {Jacob C.} and Burrows, {David Nelson} and Catlin, {Zachary E.} and Timothy Emeigh and Thomas Forstmeier and Fox, {Derek B.} and Gremling, {Killian M.} and Hossen, {Md Arman} and Nizam, {Kadri M.} and Palmer, {David M.} and Reichard, {Collin S.} and Scigliani, {Ana C.} and Stone, {Lukas R.} and Tavana, {Anthony J.} and Ian Thornton and Daniel Washington and Zugger, {Michael E.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 SPIE.; Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2024: Ultraviolet to Gamma Ray ; Conference date: 16-06-2024 Through 21-06-2024",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1117/12.3020370",
language = "English (US)",
series = "Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering",
publisher = "SPIE",
editor = "{den Herder}, {Jan-Willem A.} and Shouleh Nikzad and Kazuhiro Nakazawa",
booktitle = "Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2024",
address = "United States",
}