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Dive into the research topics where Davide Greggio is active.

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Featured researches published by Davide Greggio.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015

The NIR arm of SHARK: System for coronagraphy with High-order Adaptive optics from R to K bands

Jacopo Farinato; C. Baffa; Andrea Baruffolo; Maria Bergomi; Luca Carbonaro; Alexis Carlotti; Mauro Centrone; Johanan L. Codona; Marco Dima; Simone Esposito; D. Fantinel; Giancarlo Farisato; Wolfgang Gaessler; E. Giallongo; Davide Greggio; Philip M. Hinz; Franco Lisi; Demetrio Magrin; Luca Marafatto; Fernando Pedichini; Enrico Pinna; Alfio Puglisi; Roberto Ragazzoni; Bernardo Salasnich; Marco Stangalini; Christophe Verinaud; Valentina Viotto

SHARK is a proposal aimed at investigating the technical feasibility and the scientific capabilities of high-contrast cameras to be implemented at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). SHARK foresees two separated channels: near-infrared (NIR) channel and visible, both providing imaging and coronagraphic modes. We describe here the SHARK instrument concept, with particular emphasis on the NIR channel at the level of a conceptual study, performed in the framework of the call for proposals for new LBT instruments. The search for giant extra-Solar planets is the main science case, as we will outline in the paper.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

PLATO: a multiple telescope spacecraft for exo-planets hunting

Roberto Ragazzoni; Demetrio Magrin; H. Rauer; I. Pagano; Valerio Nascimbeni; Giampaolo Piotto; Daniele Piazza; Patrick Levacher; Mario Schweitzer; S. Basso; Timothy Bandy; Willy Benz; Maria Bergomi; Federico Biondi; Anko Boerner; F. Borsa; Alexis Brandeker; Mathias Brändli; Giordano Bruno; J. Cabrera; Simonetta Chinellato; Thierry De Roche; Marco Dima; A. Erikson; Jacopo Farinato; Matteo Munari; Mauro Ghigo; Davide Greggio; M. Gullieuszik; Maximilian Klebor

PLATO stands for PLAnetary Transits and Oscillation of stars and is a Medium sized mission selected as M3 by the European Space Agency as part of the Cosmic Vision program. The strategy behind is to scrutinize a large fraction of the sky collecting lightcurves of a large number of stars and detecting transits of exo-planets whose apparent orbit allow for the transit to be visible from the Earth. Furthermore, as the transit is basically able to provide the ratio of the size of the transiting planet to the host star, the latter is being characterized by asteroseismology, allowing to provide accurate masses, radii and hence density of a large sample of extra solar bodies. In order to be able to then follow up from the ground via spectroscopy radial velocity measurements these candidates the search must be confined to rather bright stars. To comply with the statistical rate of the occurrence of such transits around these kind of stars one needs a telescope with a moderate aperture of the order of one meter but with a Field of View that is of the order of 50 degrees in diameter. This is achieved by splitting the optical aperture into a few dozens identical telescopes with partially overlapping Field of View to build up a mixed ensemble of differently covered area of the sky to comply with various classes of magnitude stars. The single telescopes are refractive optical systems with an internally located pupil defined by a CaF2 lens, and comprising an aspheric front lens and a strong field flattener optical element close to the detectors mosaic. In order to continuously monitor for a few years with the aim to detect planetary transits similar to an hypothetical twin of the Earth, with the same revolution period, the spacecraft is going to be operated while orbiting around the L2 Lagrangian point of the Earth-Sun system so that the Earth disk is no longer a constraints potentially interfering with such a wide field continuous uninterrupted survey.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The JANUS camera onboard JUICE mission for Jupiter system optical imaging

Vincenzo Della Corte; N. Schmitz; M. Zusi; José María Bermúdez de Castro; M. R. Leese; Stefano Debei; Demetrio Magrin; Harald Michalik; P. Palumbo; R. Jaumann; G. Cremonese; Harald Hoffmann; Andrew D. Holland; Luisa M. Lara; Björn Fiethe; Enrico Friso; Davide Greggio; M. Herranz; Alexander Koncz; Alexander Lichopoj; Ignacio Martinez-Navajas; Elena Mazzotta Epifani; Harald Michaelis; Roberto Ragazzoni; Thomas Roatsch; Julio Rodrigo; Emilio Rodriguez; Pietro Schipani; Matthew Soman; Mirco Zaccariotto

JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) is the visible camera selected for the ESA JUICE mission to the Jupiter system. Resources constraints, S/C characteristics, mission design, environment and the great variability of observing conditions for several targets put stringent constraints on instrument architecture. In addition to the usual requirements for a planetary mission, the problem of mass and power consumption is particularly stringent due to the long-lasting cruising and operations at large distance from the Sun. JANUS design shall cope with a wide range of targets, from Jupiter atmosphere, to solid satellite surfaces, exosphere, rings, and lightning, all to be observed in several color and narrow-band filters. All targets shall be tracked during the mission and in some specific cases the DTM will be derived from stereo imaging. Mission design allows a quite long time range for observations in Jupiter system, with orbits around Jupiter and multiple fly-bys of satellites for 2.5 years, followed by about 6 months in orbit around Ganymede, at surface distances variable from 104 to few hundreds km. Our concept was based on a single optical channel, which was fine-tuned to cover all scientific objectives based on low to high-resolution imaging. A catoptric telescope with excellent optical quality is coupled with a rectangular detector, avoiding any scanning mechanism. In this paper the present JANUS design and its foreseen scientific capabilities are discussed.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

An extensive coronagraphic simulation applied to LBT

Daniele Vassallo; Elena Carolo; Jacopo Farinato; Maria Bergomi; Mariangela Bonavita; Alexis Carlotti; V. D'Orazi; Davide Greggio; Demetrio Magrin; D. Mesa; Enrico Pinna; Alfio Puglisi; Marco Stangalini; Christophe Verinaud; Valentina Viotto

In this article we report the results of a comprehensive simulation program aimed at investigating coronagraphic capabilities of SHARK-NIR, a camera selected to proceed to the final design phase at Large Binocular Telescope. For the purpose, we developed a dedicated simulation tool based on physical optics propagation. The code propagates wavefronts through SHARK optical train in an end-to-end fashion and can implement any kind of coronagraph. Detection limits can be finally computed, exploring a wide range of Strehl values and observing conditions.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

High order dark wavefront sensing simulations

Roberto Ragazzoni; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Jacopo Farinato; Valentina Viotto; Maria Bergomi; Marco Dima; Demetrio Magrin; Luca Marafatto; Davide Greggio; Elena Carolo; Daniele Vassallo

Dark wavefront sensing takes shape following quantum mechanics concepts in which one is able to “see” an object in one path of a two-arm interferometer using an as low as desired amount of light actually “hitting” the occulting object. A theoretical way to achieve such a goal, but in the realm of wavefront sensing, is represented by a combination of two unequal beams interferometer sharing the same incoming light, and whose difference in path length is continuously adjusted in order to show different signals for different signs of the incoming perturbation. Furthermore, in order to obtain this in white light, the path difference should be properly adjusted vs the wavelength used. While we incidentally describe how this could be achieved in a true optomechanical setup, we focus our attention to the simulation of a hypothetical “perfect” dark wavefront sensor of this kind in which white light compensation is accomplished in a perfect manner and the gain is selectable in a numerical fashion. Although this would represent a sort of idealized dark wavefront sensor that would probably be hard to match in the real glass and metal, it would also give a firm indication of the maximum achievable gain or, in other words, of the prize for achieving such device. Details of how the simulation code works and first numerical results are outlined along with the perspective for an in-depth analysis of the performances and its extension to more realistic situations, including various sources of additional noise.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

SHARK (System for coronagraphy with High order Adaptive optics from R to K band): A proposal for the LBT 2nd generation instrumentation

Jacopo Farinato; Fernando Pedichini; Enrico Pinna; Francesca Baciotti; C. Baffa; Andrea Baruffolo; Maria Bergomi; P. Bruno; E. Cappellaro; Luca Carbonaro; Alexis Carlotti; Mauro Centrone; Laird M. Close; Johanan L. Codona; S. Desidera; Marco Dima; Simone Esposito; D. Fantinel; Giancarlo Farisato; A. Fontana; Wolfgang Gaessler; E. Giallongo; R. Gratton; Davide Greggio; Juan Carlos Guerra; Olivier Guyon; Philip M. Hinz; F. Leone; Franco Lisi; Demetrio Magrin

This article presents a proposal aimed at investigating the technical feasibility and the scientific capabilities of high contrast cameras to be implemented at LBT. Such an instrument will fully exploit the unique LBT capabilities in Adaptive Optics (AO) as demonstrated by the First Light Adaptive Optics (FLAO) system, which is obtaining excellent results in terms of performance and reliability. The aim of this proposal is to show the scientific interest of such a project, together with a conceptual opto-mechanical study which shows its technical feasibility, taking advantage of the already existing AO systems, which are delivering the highest Strehl experienced in nowadays existing telescopes. Two channels are foreseen for SHARK, a near infrared channel (2.5-0.9 um) and a visible one (0.9 – 0.6 um), both providing imaging and coronagraphic modes. The visible channel is equipped with a very fast and low noise detector running at 1.0 kfps and an IFU spectroscopic port to provide low and medium resolution spectra of 1.5 x 1.5 arcsec fields. The search of extra solar giant planets is the main science case and the driver for the technical choices of SHARK, but leaving room for several other interesting scientific topics, which will be briefly depicted here.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Modelling global multi-conjugated adaptive optics

Valentina Viotto; Roberto Ragazzoni; Demetrio Magrin; Maria Bergomi; Marco Dima; Jacopo Farinato; Luca Marafatto; Davide Greggio

The recently proposed concept of Global MCAO (GMCAO) aims to look for Natural Guide Stars in a very wide technical Field of View (FoV), to increase the overall sky coverage, and deals with the consequent depth of focus reduction introducing numerically a quite-high number of Virtual Deformable Mirrors (VDMs), which are then the starting point for an optimization of the real DMs shapes for the correction of the -smaller- scientific FoV. To translate the GMCAO concept into a real system, a number of parameters requires to be analyzed and optimized, like the number of references and VDMs to be used, the technical FoV size, the spatial samplings, the sensing wavelength. These and some other major choices, like the open loop WFSs concept and design, will then drive the requirements and the performance of the system (e.g. limiting magnitude, linear response, and sensitivity). This paper collects some major results of the on-going study on the feasibility of an Adaptive Optics system for the E-ELT, based on GMCAO, with a particular emphasis on the sky coverage issue. Besides the sensitivity analysis of the optimization of the already mentioned parameters, such a topic involves the implementation of an IDL code simulation tool to estimate the system performance in terms of Strehl Ratio in a 2×2 arcmin FoV, when a variable number of NGSs and VDMs are used. Different technical FoV diameters for the references selection and various constellations can be also compared. This study could be the starting point for a dedicated laboratory testing and, in the future, an on-sky experiment at an 8m telescope with a “scaled down” demonstrator.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

A preliminary optical design for the JANUS camera of ESA's space mission JUICE

Davide Greggio; Demetrio Magrin; Roberto Ragazzoni; Matteo Munari; G. Cremonese; Maria Bergomi; Marco Dima; Jacopo Farinato; Luca Marafatto; Valentina Viotto; Stefano Debei; V. Della Corte; P. Palumbo; Harald Hoffmann; R. Jaumann; Harald Michaelis; N. Schmitz; Pietro Schipani; Luisa M. Lara

The JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) will be the on board camera of the ESA JUICE satellite dedicated to the study of Jupiter and its moons, in particular Ganymede and Europa. This optical channel will provide surface maps with plate scale of 15 microrad/pixel with both narrow and broad band filters in the spectral range between 0.35 and 1.05 micrometers over a Field of View 1.72 × 1.29 degrees2. The current optical design is based on TMA design, with on-axis pupil and off-axis field of view. The optical stop is located at the secondary mirror providing an effective collecting area of 7854 mm2 (100 mm entrance pupil diameter) and allowing a simple internal baffling for first order straylight rejection. The nominal optical performances are almost limited by the diffraction and assure a nominal MTF better than 63% all over the whole Field of View. We describe here the optical design of the camera adopted as baseline together with the trade-off that has led us to this solution.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Shaping the PSF to nearly top-hat profile: CHEOPS laboratory results

Demetrio Magrin; Jacopo Farinato; Gabriele Umbriaco; Kalyan Kumar Radhakrishnan Santhakumari; Maria Bergomi; Marco Dima; Davide Greggio; Luca Marafatto; Roberto Ragazzoni; Valentina Viotto; Matteo Munari; I. Pagano; G. Scandariato; Salvatore Scuderi; Giampaolo Piotto; Thomas Beck; Willy Benz; Christopher Broeg; Virginie Cessa; Andrea Fortier; Daniele Piazza

Spreading the PSF over a quite large amount of pixels is an increasingly used observing technique in order to reach extremely precise photometry, such as in the case of exoplanets searching and characterization via transits observations. A PSF top-hat profile helps to minimize the errors contribution due to the uncertainty on the knowledge of the detector flat field. This work has been carried out during the recent design study in the framework of the ESA small mission CHEOPS. Because of lack of perfect flat-fielding information, in the CHEOPS optics it is required to spread the light of a source into a well defined angular area, in a manner as uniform as possible. Furthermore this should be accomplished still retaining the features of a true focal plane onto the detector. In this way, for instance, the angular displacement on the focal plane is fully retained and in case of several stars in a field these look as separated as their distance is larger than the spreading size. An obvious way is to apply a defocus, while the presence of an intermediate pupil plane in the Back End Optics makes attractive to introduce here an optical device that is able to spread the light in a well defined manner, still retaining the direction of the chief ray hitting it. This can be accomplished through an holographic diffuser or through a lenslet array. Both techniques implement the concept of segmenting the pupil into several sub-zones where light is spread to a well defined angle. We present experimental results on how to deliver such PSF profile by mean of holographic diffuser and lenslet array. Both the devices are located in an intermediate pupil plane of a properly scaled laboratory setup mimicking the CHEOPS optical design configuration.


Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave | 2018

A comparison between the opto-thermo-mechanical model and lab measurements for CHEOPS

Demetrio Magrin; Maria Bergomi; Marco Dima; Davide Greggio; Luca Marafatto; Federico Biondi; Roberto Ragazzoni; Valentina Viotto; Matteo Munari; I. Pagano; G. Scandariato; Thomas Beck; Willy Benz; Christopher Broeg; Martin Diego Busch; Andrea Fortier; Martin Rieder; Eduardo Hernández; Giordano Bruno; Virginie Cessa; Daniele Piazza; Timothy Bandy; Giampaolo Piotto; Mario Salatti; Elisabetta Tommasi; Francesco Ratti; N. Rando; Atul Deep; Ivan Ngan; Lisa Gambicorti

CHEOPS is the first small class mission adopted by ESA in the framework of the Cosmic Vision 2015-2025. Its launch is foreseen in early 2019. CHEOPS aims to get transits follow-up measurements of already known exo-planets, hosted by near bright stars (V<12). Thanks to its ultra-high precision photometry, CHEOPS science goal is accurately measure the radii of planets in the super-Earth to Neptune mass range (1<Mplanet/MEarth<20). The knowledge of the radius by transit measurements, combined with the determination of planet mass through radial velocity techniques, will allow the determination/refinement of the bulk density for a large number of small planets during the scheduled 3.5 years life mission. The instrument is mainly composed of a 320 mm aperture diameter Ritchey-Chretien telescope and a Back End Optics, delivering a de-focused star image onto the focal plane. In this paper we describe the opto-thermo-mechanical model of the instrument and the measurements obtained during the opto-mechanical integration and alignment phase at Leonardo company premises, highlighting the level of congruence between the predictions and measurements.

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