Abstract
The Solar X-ray Monitor (abbreviated as XSM) on board India's Chandrayaan-2 mission is designed to carry out broadband spectroscopy of the Sun from lunar orbit. It observes the Sun as a star and measures the spectrum every second in the soft X-ray band of 1 - 15 keV with an energy resolution better than 180 eV at 5.9 keV. The primary objective of the XSM is to provide the incident solar spectrum for the X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy experiment on the Chandrayaan-2 orbiter, which aims to generate elemental abundance maps of the lunar surface. However, observations with the XSM can independently be used to study the Sun as well. The Chandrayaan-2 mission was launched on 22 July 2019, and the XSM began nominal operations, in lunar orbit, from September 2019. The in-flight observations, so far, have shown that its spectral performance has been identical to that on the ground. Measurements of the effective area from ground calibration were found to require some refinement, which has been carried out using solar observations at different incident angles. It also has been shown that the XSM is sensitive enough to detect solar activity well below A-class. This makes the investigations of microflares and the quiet solar corona feasible in addition to the study of the evolution of physical parameters during intense flares. This article presents the in-flight performance and calibration of the XSM instrument and discusses some specific science cases that can be addressed using observations with the XSM.
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