
- Mitre (United States) United States
- Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna Italy
- Université Paris Diderot France
- Inserm France
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology United States
- University of Cambridge United Kingdom
- Polytechnic University of Milan Italy
- National Institute for Space Research Brazil
- Sabancı University Turkey
- Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK United Kingdom
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, USA United States
- CEA Saclay France
- Dutch Research Council Netherlands
- Mitre (United States) United States
- University of Michigan–Flint United States
- University of Geneva Switzerland
- McGill University Canada
- University of Tübingen Germany
- SRON Netherlands
- ROYAL INSTITUTION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF LEARNING MCGILL UNIVERSITY Canada
- University of Bordeaux France
- Middle East Technical University Turkey
- mcgill university
- INPE Brazil
- DTU Space Denmark
- University of Palermo Italy
- Middle East Technical University Turkey
- Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Bordeaux France
- McGill University Finland
- Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives France
- ROYAL INSTITUTION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF LEARNING MCGILL UNIVERSITY Canada
- University of Lille France
- Research Institute in Astrophysics and Planetology France
- Netherlands Institute for Space Research Netherlands
The LOFT mission concept is one of four candidates selected by ESA for the M3 launch opportunity as Medium Size missions of the Cosmic Vision programme. The launch window is currently planned for between 2022 and 2024. LOFT is designed to exploit the diagnostics of rapid X-ray flux and spectral variability that directly probe the motion of matter down to distances very close to black holes and neutron stars, as well as the physical state of ultra-dense matter. These primary science goals will be addressed by a payload composed of a Large Area Detector (LAD) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a collimated (<1 degree field of view) experiment operating in the energy range 2-50 keV, with a 10 m^2 peak effective area and an energy resolution of 260 eV at 6 keV. The WFM will operate in the same energy range as the LAD, enabling simultaneous monitoring of a few-steradian wide field of view, with an angular resolution of <5 arcmin. The LAD and WFM experiments will allow us to investigate variability from submillisecond QPO's to year-long transient outbursts. In this paper we report the current status of the project.
Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 8443, Paper No. 8443-85, 2012