Entry Date:
April 26, 1998

RXTE: The Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer Project

Principal Investigator Alan Levine

Co-investigators Ronald Remillard , Hale Bradt , Edward Morgan , William F Mayer

Project Start Date December 1989


A NASA mission originally scheduled for launch in August 1995, but ultimately launching at 8:48 EST Saturday December 30, 1995, is designed to facilitate the study of time variability in the emission of X-ray sources with moderate spectral resolution. Time scales from microseconds to months are covered in an instantaneous spectral range from 2 to 250 keV. It is designed for a required life time of two years, a goal of five years.

The mission carries two pointed instruments, the Proportional Counter Array (PCA) developed by GSFC to cover the lower part of the energy range, and the High Energy X-ray Timing Experiment (HEXTE) developed by UCSD covering the the upper energy range. These instruments are equipped with collimators yielding a FWHM of one degree.

MIT is providing an All-Sky Monitor (ASM) that will scan about 80% of the sky every orbit, allowing monitoring at time scales of 90 minutes or longer, and an on board Experiment Data System (EDS) which processes the data from PCA and ASM. (see below for technical information and the current status of these instruments) The ASM will observe the brightest known X-ray sources for variability and also alert the community when new sources appear.