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Featured researches published by A. Migliorini.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

Analysis of near-IR spectra of 1 Ceres and 4 Vesta, targets of the Dawn mission

Pierre Vernazza; Thais Mothe-Diniz; Maria Antonietta Barucci; Mirel Birlan; Jorge M. F. Carvano; G. Strazzulla; Marcello Fulchignoni; A. Migliorini

We obtained high signal to noise spectra of the two targets of the Dawn mission, 4 Vesta and 1 Ceres from observations carried out in remote control between the Observatoire de Paris-Meudon and the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility on Mauna Kea. 4 Vesta was observed in the 0.7-2.5 μm spectral region at three different rotational phases in order to i) determine the mineral composition; ii) understand the spectral variations across the surface. Vesta was also observed in the 2.0-3.8 μm range. The 3 μm absorption feature was not detected, implying the absence of OH and/or H2O-bearing minerals on the asteroid surface at the latitude of our observations. The spectrum of 1 Ceres was obtained in the 2.0-4.1 μm range and the presence of the 3.06 μm absorption feature confirmed. Laboratory measurement of ion-irradiated organics and ices suggest that the 3.06 μm feature can be reproduced with a linear mixture of crystalyne ice and residues of ion-irradiated asphaltite.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008

First detection of hydroxyl in the atmosphere of Venus

Giuseppe Piccioni; P. Drossart; L. V. Zasova; A. Migliorini; J.-C. Gérard; Franklin P. Mills; A. Shakun; A. García Muñoz; N.I. Ignatiev; D. Grassi; V. Cottini; F. W. Taylor; Stephane Erard

Context. Airglow emissions, such as previously observed from NO and O2(a−X )( 0−0) on Venus, provide insight into the chemical and dynamical processes that control the composition and energy balance in the upper atmospheres of planets. The OH airglow emission has been observed previously only in the Earth’s atmosphere where it has been used to infer atomic oxygen abundances. The O2(a − X )( 0−1) airglow emission also has only been observed in the Earth’s atmosphere, and neither laboratory nor theoretical studies have reached a consensus on its transition probability. Aims. We report measurements of night-side airglow emission in the atmosphere of Venus in the OH (2−0), OH (1−0), O2(a − X )( 0−1), and O2(a − X )( 0−0) bands. This is the first detection of the first three of these airglow emissions on another planet. These observations provide the most direct observational constraints to date on H, OH, and O3, key species in the chemistry of Venus’ upper atmosphere. Methods. Airglow emission detected at wavelengths of 1.40−1.49 and 2.6−3.14 µm in limb observations by the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) on the Venus Express spacecraft is attributed to the OH (2−0) and (1−0) transitions, respectively, and compared to calculations from a photochemical model. Simultaneous limb observations of airglow emission in the O2(a − X )( 0−0) and (0−1) bands at 1.27 and 1.58 µm, respectively, were used to derive the ratio of the transition probabilities for these bands. Results. The integrated emission rates for the OH (2−0) and (1−0) bands were measured to be 100 ± 40 and 880 ± 90 kR respectively, both peaking at an altitude of 96 ± 2 km near midnight local time for the considered orbit. The measured ratio of the O2(a −X )( 0−0) and (0−1) bands is 78 ± 8. Conclusions. Photochemical model calculations suggest the observed OH emission is produced primarily via the Bates-Nicolet mechanism, as on the Earth. The observed ratio of the intensities of the O2(a − X )( 0−0) and (0−1) bands implies the ratio of their transition probabilities is 63 ± 6.


Nature | 2016

Exposed water ice on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko

G. Filacchione; M.C. De Sanctis; F. Capaccioni; A. Raponi; F. Tosi; M. Ciarniello; P. Cerroni; G. Piccioni; M. T. Capria; E. Palomba; G. Bellucci; Stephane Erard; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Cedric Leyrat; Gabriele Arnold; M. A. Barucci; M. Fulchignoni; B. Schmitt; Eric Quirico; R. Jaumann; K. Stephan; A. Longobardo; V. Mennella; A. Migliorini; E. Ammannito; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; M. I. Blecka; R. Carlson

Although water vapour is the main species observed in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko and water is the major constituent of cometary nuclei, limited evidence for exposed water-ice regions on the surface of the nucleus has been found so far. The absence of large regions of exposed water ice seems a common finding on the surfaces of many of the comets observed so far. The nucleus of 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko appears to be fairly uniformly coated with dark, dehydrated, refractory and organic-rich material. Here we report the identification at infrared wavelengths of water ice on two debris falls in the Imhotep region of the nucleus. The ice has been exposed on the walls of elevated structures and at the base of the walls. A quantitative derivation of the abundance of ice in these regions indicates the presence of millimetre-sized pure water-ice grains, considerably larger than in all previous observations. Although micrometre-sized water-ice grains are the usual result of vapour recondensation in ice-free layers, the occurrence of millimetre-sized grains of pure ice as observed in the Imhotep debris falls is best explained by grain growth by vapour diffusion in ice-rich layers, or by sintering. As a consequence of these processes, the nucleus can develop an extended and complex coating in which the outer dehydrated crust is superimposed on layers enriched in water ice. The stratigraphy observed on 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko is therefore the result of evolutionary processes affecting the uppermost metres of the nucleus and does not necessarily require a global layering to have occurred at the time of the comet’s formation.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Three-dimensional direct simulation Monte-Carlo modeling of the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko observed by the VIRTIS and ROSINA instruments on board Rosetta

N. Fougere; Kathrin Altwegg; J.-J. Berthelier; André Bieler; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Ursina Maria Calmonte; F. Capaccioni; Michael R. Combi; J. De Keyser; V. Debout; Stephane Erard; Björn Fiethe; G. Filacchione; U. Fink; S. A. Fuselier; Tamas I. Gombosi; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; Myrtha Hässig; Zhenguang Huang; Léna Le Roy; Cedric Leyrat; A. Migliorini; G. Piccioni; G. Rinaldi; Martin Rubin; Y. Shou; Valeriy M. Tenishev; Gabor Zsolt Toth; Chia-Yu Tzou

Since its rendezvous with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P), the Rosetta spacecraft has provided invaluable information contributing to our understanding of the cometary environment. On board, the VIRTIS and ROSINA instruments can both measure gas parameters in the rarefied cometary atmosphere, the so-called coma, and provide complementary results with remote sensing and in situ measurement techniques, respectively. The data from both ROSINA and VIRTIS instruments suggest that the source regions of H2O and CO2 are not uniformly distributed over the surface of the nucleus even after accounting for the changing solar illumination of the irregularly shaped rotating nucleus. The source regions of H2O and CO2 are also relatively different from one another. Aims. The use of a combination of a formal numerical data inversion method with a fully kinetic coma model is a way to correlate and interpret the information provided by these two instruments to fully understand the volatile environment and activity of comet 67P. Methods. In this work, the nonuniformity of the outgassing activity at the surface of the nucleus is described by spherical harmonics and constrained by ROSINA-DFMS data. This activity distribution is coupled with the local illumination to describe the inner boundary conditions of a 3D direct simulation Monte-Carlo (DSMC) approach using the Adaptive Mesh Particle Simulator (AMPS) code applied to the H2O and CO2 coma of comet 67P. Results. We obtain activity distribution of H2O and CO2 showing a dominant source of H2O in the Hapi region, while more CO2 is produced in the southern hemisphere. The resulting model outputs are analyzed and compared with VIRTIS-M/-H and ROSINA-DFMS measurements, showing much better agreement between model and data than a simpler model assuming a uniform surface activity. The evolution of the H2O and CO2 production rates with heliocentric distance are derived accurately from the coma model showing agreement between the observations from the different instruments and ground-based observations. Conclusions. We derive the activity distributions for H2O and CO2 at the surface of the nucleus described in spherical harmonics, which we couple to the local solar illumination to constitute the boundary conditions of our coma model. The model presented reproduces the coma observations made by the ROSINA and VIRTIS instruments on board the Rosetta spacecraft showing our understanding of the physics of 67P’s coma. This model can be used for further data analyses, such as dust modeling, in a future work.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

The Venus nighttime atmosphere as observed by the VIRTIS‐M instrument. Average fields from the complete infrared data set

D. Grassi; Romano Politi; N.I. Ignatiev; C. Plainaki; Sebastien Lebonnois; P. Wolkenberg; L. Montabone; A. Migliorini; Giuseppe Piccioni; Pierre Drossart

We present and discuss here the average fields of the Venus atmosphere derived from the nighttime observations in the 1960–2350 cm−1 spectral range by the VIRTIS-M instrument on board the Venus Express satellite. These fields include: (a) the air temperatures in the 1–100 mbar pressure range (~85–65 km above the surface), (b) the altitude of the clouds top, and (c) the average CO mixing ratio. A new retrieval code based on the Bayesian formalism has been developed and validated on simulated observations, to statistically assess the retrieval capabilities of the scheme once applied to the VIRTIS data. The same code has then been used to process the entire VIRTIS-M data set. Resulting individual retrievals have been binned on the basis of local time and latitude, to create average fields. Air temperature fields confirm the general trends previously reported in Grassi et al. (2010), using a simplified retrieval scheme and a more limited data set. At the lowest altitudes probed by VIRTIS (~65 km), air temperatures are strongly asymmetric around midnight, with a pronounced minima at 3LT, 70°S. Moving to higher levels, the air temperatures first become more uniform in local time (~75 km), then display a colder region on the evening side at the upper boundary of VIRTIS sensitivity range (~80 km). As already shown by Ignatiev et al. (2008) for the dayside, the cloud effective altitude increases monotonically from the south pole to the equator. However, the variations observed in night data are consistent with an overall variation of just 1 km, much smaller than the 4 km reported for the dayside. The cloud altitudes appear slightly higher on the evening side. Both observations are consistent with a less vigorous meridional circulation on the nightside of the planet. Carbon monoxide is not strongly constrained by the VIRTIS-M data. However, average fields present a clear maximum of 80 ppm around 60°S, well above the retrieval uncertainty. Once the intrinsic low sensitivity of VIRTIS data in the region of cold collar is kept in mind, this datum is consistent with a [CO] enrichment toward the poles driven by meridional circulation.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Spectral and mineralogical characterization of inner main-belt V-type asteroids

M.C. De Sanctis; A. Migliorini; F. Luzia Jasmin; Davide Di Lazzaro; G. Filacchione; S. Marchi; E. Ammannito; M. T. Capria

Context. V-type asteroids in the inner main belt are thought to be genetically related to (4) Vesta as collisional fragments. We investigate their relationship with Vesta observing putative V-type asteroids. Aims. The aim of this work is to observe candidate V-type asteroids, selected in different regions of the inner main belt, to characterize them and hence better understand their relationship with (4) Vesta. Methods. We present new NIR reflectance spectra of 18 V-type candidate asteroids, selected from datasets of possible V-type asteroids. The data were obtained at the 3.6 m Telescopio Nazionale Galileo, covering the spectral range 0.7 to 2.5 μm. We derive spectral parameters from NIR spectra to infer mineralogical information of the observed asteroids. The spectra of these asteroids are examined and compared to those of Howardite-Eucrite-Diogenite meteorites (HED), of which (4) Vesta is believed to be the parent body, and other V-type asteroids observed during previous campaigns. To enlarge the data set and increase the statistical significance of the analysis, we included the data presented in our previous article, obtaining a final data set of 41 V-type asteroids. Results. The V-type asteroids examined here show a higher variability of band parameters with respect to HEDs values, as for (4) Vesta. This result indicates that (4) Vesta and V-type asteroids have mineralogies that are not completely represented in the HEDs collection. Conclusions. An important finding is that some of the observed asteroids show spectral characteristics similar to diogenites, a result that may have relevant implications on their origin. Moreover, most of the diogenitic asteroids are not members of the Vesta classical family.


Science | 2016

Seasonal exposure of carbon dioxide ice on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

G. Filacchione; A. Raponi; F. Capaccioni; M. Ciarniello; F. Tosi; M. T. Capria; M.C. De Sanctis; A. Migliorini; G. Piccioni; P. Cerroni; M. A. Barucci; S. Fornasier; Bernard Schmitt; Eric Quirico; S. Erard; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; C. Leyrat; Gabriele Arnold; V. Mennella; E. Ammannito; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; M. I. Blecka; Robert W. Carlson; U. Carsenty; L. Colangeli; M. Combes; Michael R. Combi

Rosetta observes sublimating surface ices Comets are “dirty snowballs” made of ice and dust, but they are dark because the ice sublimates away, leaving some of the dust behind on the surface. The Rosetta spacecraft has provided a close-up view of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko as it passes through its closest point to the Sun (see the Perspective by Dello Russo). Filacchione et al. detected the spectral signature of solid CO2 (dry ice) in small patches on the surface of the nucleus as they emerged from local winter. By modeling how the CO2 sublimates, they constrain the composition of comets and how ices generate the gaseous coma and tail. Fornasier et al. studied images of the comet and discovered bright patches on the surface where ice was exposed, which disappeared as the ice sublimated. They also saw frost emerging from receding shadows. The surface of the comet was noticeably less red just after local dawn, indicating that icy material is removed by sunlight during the local day. Science, this issue p. 1563, p. 1566; see also p. 1536 Solid carbon dioxide on the surface of a comet nucleus has been found by the Rosetta spacecraft. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is one of the most abundant species in cometary nuclei, but because of its high volatility, CO2 ice is generally only found beneath the surface. We report the infrared spectroscopic identification of a CO2 ice–rich surface area located in the Anhur region of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Spectral modeling shows that about 0.1% of the 80- by 60-meter area is CO2 ice. This exposed ice was observed a short time after the comet exited local winter; following the increased illumination, the CO2 ice completely disappeared over about 3 weeks. We estimate the mass of the sublimated CO2 ice and the depth of the eroded surface layer. We interpret the presence of CO2 ice as the result of the extreme seasonal changes induced by the rotation and orbit of the comet.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Evolution of CO2, CH4, and OCS abundances relative to H2O in the coma of comet 67P around perihelion from Rosetta/VIRTIS-H observations

Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Jacques Crovisier; S. Erard; F. Capaccioni; C. Leyrat; G. Filacchione; P. Drossart; Th. Encrenaz; N. Biver; M.C. De Sanctis; B. Schmitt; E. Kührt; M. T. Capria; M. Combes; Michael R. Combi; N. Fougere; Gabriele Arnold; Uwe Fink; W. H. Ip; A. Migliorini; G. Piccioni; G. P. Tozzi

Infrared observations of the coma of 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko were carried out from 2015 July to September, i.e. around perihelion (2015 August 13), with the high-resolution channel of the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer instrument onboard Rosetta. We present the analysis of fluorescence emission lines of H2O, CO2, 13CO2, OCS, and CH4 detected in limb sounding with the field of view at 2.7–5 km from the comet centre. Measurements are sampling outgassing from the illuminated Southern hemisphere, as revealed by H2O and CO2 raster maps, which show anisotropic distributions, aligned along the projected rotation axis. An abrupt increase of water production is observed 6 d after perihelion. In the meantime, CO2, CH4, and OCS abundances relative to water increased by a factor of 2 to reach mean values of 32, 0.47, and 0.18 per cent, respectively, averaging post-perihelion data. We interpret these changes as resulting from the erosion of volatile-poor surface layers. Sustained dust ablation due to the sublimation of water ice maintained volatile-rich layers near the surface until at least the end of the considered period, as expected for low thermal inertia surface layers. The large abundance measured for CO2 should be representative of the 67P nucleus original composition, and indicates that 67P is a CO2-rich comet. Comparison with abundance ratios measured in the Northern hemisphere shows that seasons play an important role in comet outgassing. The low CO2/H2O values measured above the illuminated Northern hemisphere are not original, but the result of the devolatilization of the uppermost layers.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Are the E-type asteroids (2867) Steins, a target of the Rosetta mission, and NEA (3103) Eger remnants of an old asteroid family?

S. Fornasier; Francesco Marzari; E. Dotto; M. A. Barucci; A. Migliorini

Aims. We have investigated the spectral properties of the E-type asteroids 2867 Steins, a main belt object target of the Rosetta mission, and 3103 Eger, a near Earth asteroid. The strong spectral similarity between these two objects suggests a possible common origin in spite of their presently different orbits. We explore the possibility that Steins and Eger are both remnants of an old asteroid family, the outcome of the breakup of a parent body at about 2.36 AU. Eger possibly moved into an Earth-crossing orbit driven by the Yarkovsky effect and resonances. Methods. Low resolution spectroscopy in the visible range was carried out with the 3.5 m New Technology Telescope (NTT) of the European Southern Observatory. We used the numerical integrator SWIFT-RMVSY, which takes into account the diurnal and seasonal Yarkovsky effect, to simulate the dynamical evolution of fictitious family fragments. Results. The spectra of Steins and Eger are very similar, and both show an absorption feature centered at 0.49 µm typical of the E[II] subgroup. They are peculiar among the subgroup because of the deep absorption feature and steep spectral slope. They may be members of an old eroded asteroid family which formed close to the present location of Steins. Numerical orbital integrations show that there is a dynamical pathway between the present orbit of Steins, possibly the largest remnant of the family, and Earth-crossing orbits like that of Eger.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Infrared observations of Jovian aurora from Juno's first orbits: Main oval and satellite footprints

A. Mura; A. Adriani; F. Altieri; J. E. P. Connerney; S. J. Bolton; Maria Luisa Moriconi; Jean-Claude Gérard; W. S. Kurth; B. M. Dinelli; F. Fabiano; F. Tosi; Sushil K. Atreya; Fran Bagenal; G. R. Gladstone; Candice J. Hansen; Steven M. Levin; B. H. Mauk; D. J. McComas; G. Sindoni; G. Filacchione; A. Migliorini; D. Grassi; Giuseppe Piccioni; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; D. Turrini; S. Stefani; M. Amoroso; A. Olivieri

The Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) is an imager/spectrometer on board NASA/Juno mission for the study of the Jovian aurorae. The first results of JIRAMs imager channel observations of the H3+ infrared emission, collected around the first Juno perijove, provide excellent spatial and temporal distribution of the Jovian aurorae, and show the morphology of the main ovals, the polar regions, and the footprints of Io, Europa and Ganymede. The extended Io “tail” persists for ~3 hours after the passage of the satellite flux tube. Multi-arc structures of varied spatial extent appear in both main auroral ovals. Inside the main ovals, intense, localized emissions are observed. In the southern aurora, an evident circular region of strong depletion of H3+ emissions is partially surrounded by an intense emission arc. The southern aurora is brighter than the north one in these observations. Similar, probably conjugate emission patterns are distinguishable in both polar regions.

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