A. Ingallinera
University of Catania
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Featured researches published by A. Ingallinera.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
A. Ingallinera; C. Trigilio; Grazia Umana; P. Leto; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; Nicolas Flagey; R. Paladini; Claudia Agliozzo; C. S. Buemi
We report the radio observations of a subsample of the 428 Galactic compact bubbles discovered at 24 μm with the MIPSGAL survey. Pervasive through the entire Galactic plane, these objects are thought to be different kinds of evolved stars. The very large majority of the bubbles (∼70 per cent) are however not yet classified. We conducted radio observations with the Expanded Very Large Array at 6 and 20 cm in order to obtain the spectral index of 55 bubbles. We found that at least 70 per cent of the 31 bubbles for which we were effectively able to compute the spectral index (or its lower limit) are likely to be thermal emitters. We were also able to resolve some bubbles, obtaining that the size of the radio nebula is usually similar to the IR size, although our low resolution (with respect to IR images) did not allow further morphological studies. Comparisons between radio flux densities and IR archive data from Spitzer and IRAS suggest that at least three unclassified bubbles can be treated as planetary nebula candidates.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
G. Umana; C. S. Buemi; C. Trigilio; P. Leto; C. Agliozzo; A. Ingallinera; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; Joseph L. Hora
We have observed the radio nebula surrounding the Galactic luminous blue variable candidate G79.29+0.46 with the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA) at 6 cm. These new radio observations allow a morphological comparison between the radio emission, which traces the ionized gas component, and the mid-IR emission, a tracer of the dust component. The InfraRed Array Camera (8 μm) and the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (24 μm and 70 μm) images have been reprocessed and compared with the EVLA map. We confirm the presence of a second shell at 24 μm and also provide evidence for its detection at 70 μm. The differences between the spatial morphology of the radio and mid-IR maps indicate the existence of two dust populations, the cooler one emitting mostly at longer wavelengths. Analysis of the two dusty, nested shells have provided us with an estimate of the characteristic timescales for shell ejection, providing important constraints for stellar evolutionary models. Finer details of the ionized gas distribution can be appreciated thanks to the improved quality of the new 6 cm image, most notably the highly structured texture of the nebula. Evidence of interaction between the nebula and the surrounding interstellar medium can be seen in the radio map, including brighter features that delineate regions where the shell structure is locally modified. In particular, the brighter filaments in the southwest region appear to frame the shocked southwestern clump reported from CO observations.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
A. Ingallinera; C. Trigilio; Grazia Umana; P. Leto; C. Agliozzo; C. S. Buemi
We present radio observations of two supernova remnants and four planetary nebulae with the Very Large Array and the Green Bank Telescope. These objects are part of a larger sample of radio sources, discussed in a previous paper, counterpart of the MIPSGAL 24-micron compact bubbles. For the two supernova remnants we combined the interferometric observations with single-dish data to obtain both a high resolution and a good sensitivity to extended structures. We discuss in detail the entire combination procedure adopted and the reliability of the resulting maps. For one supernova remnant we pose a more stringent upper limit for the flux density of its undetected pulsar, and we also show prominent spectral index spatial variations, probably due to inhomogeneities in the magnetic field and in its ejecta or to an interaction between the supernova shock and molecular clouds. We eventually use the 5-GHz maps of the four planetary nebulae to estimate their distance and their ionized mass.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
P. Leto; C. Trigilio; L. M. Oskinova; Richard Ignace; C. S. Buemi; G. Umana; A. Ingallinera; H. Todt; F. Leone
In this paper we investigate the multiwavelengths properties of the magnetic early B-type star HR7355. We present its radio light curves at several frequencies, taken with the Jansky Very Large Array, and X-ray spectra, taken with the XMM X-ray telescope. Modeling of the radio light curves for the Stokes I and V provides a quantitative analysis of the HR7355 magnetosphere. A comparison between HR7355 and a similar analysis for the Ap star CUVir, allows us to study how the different physical parameters of the two stars affect the structure of the respective magnetospheres where the non-thermal electrons originate. Our model includes a cold thermal plasma component that accumulates at high magnetic latitudes that influences the radio regime, but does not give rise to X-ray emission. Instead, the thermal X-ray emission arises from shocks generated by wind stream collisions close to the magnetic equatorial plane. The analysis of the X-ray spectrum of HR7355 also suggests the presence of a non-thermal radiation. Comparison between the spectral index of the power-law X-ray energy distribution with the non-thermal electron energy distribution indicates that the non-thermal X-ray component could be the auroral signature of the non-thermal electrons that impact the stellar surface, the same non-thermal electrons that are responsible for the observed radio emission. On the basis of our analysis, we suggest a novel model that simultaneously explains the X-ray and the radio features of HR7355 and is likely relevant for magnetospheres of other magnetic early type stars.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
C. S. Buemi; Corrado Trigilio; P. Leto; G. Umana; A. Ingallinera; F. Cavallaro; L. Cerrigone; C. Agliozzo; F. Bufano; S. Riggi; S. Molinari; F. Schillirò
We present a multi-wavelength study of the Galactic Luminous Blue Variable HR Carinae, based on new high resolution mid-infrared (IR) and radio images obtained with the Very Large Telescope (VLT) and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), which have been complemented by far-infrared Herschel-PACS observations and ATCA archive data. The Herschel images reveal the large-scale distribution of the dusty emitting nebula, which extends mainly to the North-East direction, up to 70 arcsec from the central star, and is oriented along the direction of the space motion of the star. In the mid-infrared images, the brightness distribution is characterized by two arc-shaped structures, tracing an inner envelope surrounding the central star more closely. At radio wavelengths, the ionized gas emission lies on the opposite side of the cold dust with respect to the position of the star, as if the ionized front was confined by the surrounding medium in the North-South direction. The comparison with previous data indicates significant changes in the radio nebula morphology and in the mass-loss rate from the central star, which has increased from 6.1
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
P. Leto; Corrado Trigilio; C. S. Buemi; G. Umana; A. Ingallinera; Luciano Cerrigone
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
C. Agliozzo; Robert Nikutta; Giuliano Pignata; N. M. Phillips; A. Ingallinera; C. S. Buemi; G. Umana; P. Leto; Corrado Trigilio; A. Noriega-Crespo; R. Paladini; F. Bufano; F. Cavallaro
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Software and Cyberinfrastructure for Astronomy V | 2018
Alessandro Marassi; Marco Brambilla; S. Riggi; A. Ingallinera; C. Trigilio; Paolo Di Marcantonio
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
F. Bufano; P. Leto; D. Carey; G. Umana; C. S. Buemi; A. Ingallinera; A. Bulpitt; Francesco Cavallaro; S. Riggi; Corrado Trigilio; S. Molinari
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
Francesco Cavallaro; Corrado Trigilio; G. Umana; Thomas M. O. Franzen; R. P. Norris; P. Leto; A. Ingallinera; C. S. Buemi; J. Marvil; C. Agliozzo; F. Bufano; L. Cerrigone; S. Riggi
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