About Chandra Archive Proposer Instruments & Calibration Newsletters Data Analysis HelpDesk Calibration Database NASA Archives & Centers Chandra Science Links

Skip the navigation links
Last modified: 15 December 2008
Hardcopy (PDF): A4 | Letter

Event


X-ray astronomy instruments record a separate signal from every individual photon they detect. This is unlike typical optical CCDs (for example WF/PC2 on Hubble Space Telescope) which need to integrate the signal from a number of photons to generate a detectable signal. As a result X-ray data is stored event by event, which retains more information and allows great flexibility of analysis.

Every X-ray "event" (a general term for a detection; may refer to a photon or a background cosmic ray) is characterized by: a "pulse height" (PHA) that encodes the energy of the incoming photon; a time; a grade, and typically two position coordinates. The large amount of information for each event, allows rather complex and sophisticated analysis. For example, a user may with to exclude events which occurred during a period of high background, and then display the events as a spectrum vs. time image. Such multi-dimensional analysis is common to X-ray astronomy.

Retaining the individual events also retains the Poisson ("counting statistics") nature of the data, and so allows the statistical significance of sources or features to be assessed more readily.

For more details on the contents of a Chandra event file, visit the Data Products Guide.



Hardcopy (PDF): A4 | Letter
Last modified: 15 December 2008


The Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC) is operated for NASA by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.    Email: cxcweb@head.cfa.harvard.edu
Smithsonian Institution, Copyright © 1998-2004. All rights reserved.