F. Faustini
Agenzia Spaziale Italiana
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Publication
Featured researches published by F. Faustini.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
S. Molinari; John Bally; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; M. Compiegne; J.-P. Bernard; D. Paradis; P. Martin; L. Testi; M. J. Barlow; T. J. T. Moore; R. Plume; B. M. Swinyard; A. Zavagno; L. Calzoletti; A. M. di Giorgio; D. Elia; F. Faustini; P. Natoli; M. Pestalozzi; S. Pezzuto; F. Piacentini; G. Polenta; D. Polychroni; E. Schisano; A. Traficante; M. Veneziani; Cara Battersby; Michael G. Burton; Sean J. Carey; Yasuo Fukui
Thermal images of cold dust in the Central Molecular Zone of the Milky Way, obtained with the far-infrared cameras on board the Herschel satellite, reveal a similar to 3 x 10(7) M-circle dot ring of dense and cold clouds orbiting the Galactic center. Using a simple toy model, an elliptical shape having semi-major axes of 100 and 60 pc is deduced. The major axis of this 100 pc ring is inclined by about 40 degrees with respect to the plane of the sky and is oriented perpendicular to the major axes of the Galactic Bar. The 100 pc ring appears to trace the system of stable x(2) orbits predicted for the barred Galactic potential. Sgr A* is displaced with respect to the geometrical center of symmetry of the ring. The ring is twisted and its morphology suggests a flattening ratio of 2 for the Galactic potential, which is in good agreement with the bulge flattening ratio derived from the 2MASS data.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
J.-Ph. Bernard; D. Paradis; D. J. Marshall; L. Montier; Guilaine Lagache; R. Paladini; M. Veneziani; Christopher M. Brunt; J. C. Mottram; Peter G. Martin; I. Ristorcelli; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; M. Compiegne; Nicolas Flagey; L. D. Anderson; Cristina Popescu; Richard J. Tuffs; William T. Reach; G. J. White; M. Benedetti; L. Calzoletti; A. M. DiGiorgio; F. Faustini; M. Juvela; C. Joblin; G. Joncas; M.-A. Mivilles-Deschenes; Luca Olmi; A. Traficante; F. Piacentini
New observations withHerschel allow accurate measurement of the equilibrium temperature of large dust grains heated by the interstellar radiation field (ISRF), which is critical in deriving dust column density and masses. We present temperature maps derived from the Herschel SPIRE and PACS data in two fields along the Galactic plane, obtained as part of the Hi-GAL survey during the Herschel science demonstration phase (SDP). We analyze the distribution of the dust temperature spatially, as well as along the two lines-of-sight (LOS) through the Galaxy. The zero-level offsets in the Herschel maps were established by comparison with the IRAS and Planck data at comparable wavelengths. We derive maps of the dust temperature and optical depth by adjusting a detailed model for dust emission at each pixel. The dust temperature maps show variations in the ISRF intensity and reveal the intricate mixture of the warm dust heated by massive stars and the cold filamentary structures of embedded molecular clouds. The dust optical depth at 250 μm is well correlated with the gas column density, but with a significantly higher dust emissivity than in the solar neighborhood. We correlate the optical depth with 3-D cubes of the dust extinction to investigate variations in the ISRF strength and dust abundance along the line of sight through the spiral structure of the Galaxy. We show that the warmest dust along the LOS is located in the spiral arms of the Galaxy, and we quantify their respective IR contribution.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
Nicolas Peretto; G. A. Fuller; R. Plume; L. D. Anderson; John Bally; Cara Battersby; M. T. Beltrán; J.-P. Bernard; L. Calzoletti; A. DiGiorgio; F. Faustini; Jason M. Kirk; C. Lenfestey; D. J. Marshall; P. Martin; S. Molinari; L. Montier; F. Motte; I. Ristorcelli; J. A. Rodón; H. A. Smith; A. Traficante; M. Veneziani; Derek Ward-Thompson; Lucy Ann Wilcock
Infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) are cold and dense reservoirs of gas potentially available to form stars. Many of these clouds are likely to be pristine structures representing the initial conditions for star formation. The study presented here aims to construct and analyze accurate column density and dust temperature maps of IRDCs by using the first Herschel data from the Hi-GAL galactic plane survey. These fundamental quantities, are essential for understanding processes such as fragmentation in the early stages of the formation of stars in molecular clouds. We have developed a simple pixel-by-pixel SED fitting method, which accounts for the background emission. By fitting a grey-body function at each position, we recover the spatial variations in both the dust column density and temperature within the IRDCs. This method is applied to a sample of 22 IRDCs exhibiting a range of angular sizes and peak column densities. Our analysis shows that the dust temperature decreases significantly within IRDCs, from background temperatures of 20–30 K to minimum temperatures of 8–15 K within the clouds, showing that dense molecular clouds are not isothermal. Temperature gradients have most likely an important impact on the fragmentation of IRDCs. Local temperature minima are strongly correlated with column density peaks, which in a few cases reach = 1×1023 cm-2, identifying these clouds as candidate massive prestellar cores. Applying this technique to the full Hi-GAL data set will provide important constraints on the fragmentation and thermal properties of IRDCs, and help identify hundreds of massive prestellar core candidates.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
D. Elia; E. Schisano; S. Molinari; Thomas P. Robitaille; Daniel Anglés-Alcázar; John Bally; Cara Battersby; M. Benedettini; N. Billot; L. Calzoletti; A. M. di Giorgio; F. Faustini; J. Z. Li; P. Martin; Larry Morgan; F. Motte; J. C. Mottram; P. Natoli; Luca Olmi; R. Paladini; F. Piacentini; M. Pestalozzi; S. Pezzuto; D. Polychroni; M. D. Smith; F. Strafella; Guy S. Stringfellow; L. Testi; M. A. Thompson; A. Traficante
We present a first study of the star-forming compact dust condensations revealed by Herschel in the two 2° × 2° Galactic Plane fields centered at [l, b] = [30°, 0°] and [l, b] =[59°, 0°] , respectively, and observed during the science demonstration phase for the Herschel Infrared GALactic plane survey (Hi-GAL) key-project. Compact source catalogs extracted for the two fields in the five Hi-GAL bands (70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 μm) were merged based on simple criteria of positional association and spectral energy distribution (SED) consistency into a final catalog which contains only coherent SEDs with counterparts in at least three adjacent Herschel bands. These final source lists contain 528 entries for the l = 30° field, and 444 entries for the = 59° field. The SED coverage has been augmented with ancillary data at 24 μm and 1.1 mm. SED modeling for the subset of 318 and 101 sources (in the two fields, respectively) for which the distance is known was carried out using both a structured star/disk/envelope radiative transfer model and a simple isothermal grey-body. Global parameters like mass, luminosity, temperature and dust properties have been estimated. The L_(bol)/M_(env) ratio spans four orders of magnitudes from values compatible with the pre-protostellar phase to embedded massive zero-age main sequence stars. Sources in the l = 59° field have on average lower L/M, possibly outlining an overall earlier evolutionary stage with respect to the sources in the l = 30° field. Many of these cores are actively forming high-mass stars, although the estimated core surface densities appear to be an order of magnitude below the 1 g cm^(-2) critical threshold for high-mass star formation.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
A. Zavagno; L. D. Anderson; D. Russeil; Larry Morgan; Guy S. Stringfellow; L. Deharveng; J. A. Rodón; Thomas P. Robitaille; J. C. Mottram; F. Schuller; L. Testi; N. Billot; S. Molinari; A. di Gorgio; Jason M. Kirk; Christopher M. Brunt; Derek Ward-Thompson; A. Traficante; M. Veneziani; F. Faustini; L. Calzoletti
Context. It has been shown that by means of different physical mechanisms the expansion of H II regions can trigger the formation of new stars of all masses. This process may be important to the formation of massive stars but has never been quantified in the Galaxy. Aims. We use Herschel-PACS and -SPIRE images from the Herschel infrared survey of the Galactic plane, Hi-GAL, to perform this study. Methods. We combine the Spitzer-GLIMPSE and -MIPSGAL, radio-continuum and submillimeter surveys such as ATLASGAL with Hi-GAL to study young stellar objects (YSOs) observed towards Galactic H II regions. We select a representative H II region, N49, located in the field centered on l = 30 degrees observed as part of the Hi-GAL science demonstration phase, to demonstrate the importance Hi-GAL will have to this field of research. Results. Hi-GAL PACS and SPIRE images reveal a new population of embedded young stars, coincident with bright ATLASGAL condensations. The Hi-GAL images also allow us, for the first time, to constrain the physical properties of the newly formed stars by means of fits to their spectral energy distribution. Massive young stellar objects are observed at the borders of the N49 region and represent second generation massive stars whose formation has been triggered by the expansion of the ionized region. Conclusions. The first Hi-GAL images obtained using PACS and SPIRE have demonstrated the capability to investigate star formation triggered by H II regions. With radio, submillimeter, and shorter wavelength infrared data from other surveys, the Hi-GAL images reveal young massive star-forming clumps surrounding the perimeter of the N49 H II generated bubble. Hi-GAL enables us to detect a population of young stars at different evolutionary stages, cold condensations only being detected in the SPIRE wavelength range. The far IR coverage of Hi-GAL strongly constrains the physical properties of the YSOs. The large and unbiased spatial coverage of this survey offers us a unique opportunity to lead, for the first time, a global study of star formation triggered by H II regions in our Galaxy.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
Peter G. Martin; M.-A. Miville-Deschênes; A. Roy; J.-P. Bernard; S. Molinari; N. Billot; Christopher M. Brunt; L. Calzoletti; A. M. DiGiorgio; D. Elia; F. Faustini; G. Joncas; J. C. Mottram; P. Natoli; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; R. Paladini; J.-F. Robitaille; F. Strafella; A. Traficante; M. Veneziani
In Herschel images of the Galactic plane and many star forming regions, a major factor limiting our ability to extract faint compact sources is cirrus confusion noise, operationally defined as the “statistical error to be expected in photometric measurements due to confusion in a background of fluctuating surface brightness”. The histogram of the flux densities of extracted sources shows a distinctive faint-end cutoff below which the catalog suffers from incompleteness and the flux densities become unreliable. This empirical cutoff should be closely related to the estimated cirrus noise and we show that this is the case. We compute the cirrus noise directly, both on Herschel images from which the bright sources have been removed and on simulated images of cirrus with statistically similar fluctuations. We connect these direct estimates with those from power spectrum analysis, which has been used extensively to predict the cirrus noise and provides insight into how it depends on various statistical properties and photometric operational parameters. We report multi-wavelength power spectra of diffuse Galactic dust emission from Hi-GAL observations at 70 to 500 μm within Galactic plane fields at l = 30° and l = 59° .We find that the exponent of the power spectrum is about −3. At 250 μm, the amplitude of the power spectrum increases roughly as the square of the median brightness of the map and so the expected cirrus noise scales linearly with the median brightness. For a given region, the wavelength dependence of the amplitude can be described by the square of the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the dust emission. Generally, the confusion noise will be a worse problem at longer wavelengths, because of the combination of lower angular resolution and the rising power spectrum of cirrus toward lower spatial frequencies, but the photometric signal to noise will also depend on the relative SED of the source compared to the cirrus.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
S. Molinari; E. Schisano; D. Elia; M. Pestalozzi; A. Traficante; S. Pezzuto; B. M. Swinyard; A. Noriega-Crespo; John Bally; T. J. T. Moore; R. Plume; A. Zavagno; A. M. di Giorgio; S. J. Liu; G. L. Pilbratt; J. C. Mottram; D. Russeil; Lorenzo Piazzo; M. Veneziani; M. Benedettini; L. Calzoletti; F. Faustini; P. Natoli; F. Piacentini; M. Merello; A. Palmese; R. Del Grande; D. Polychroni; K. L. J. Rygl; G. Polenta
Aims. We present the first public release of high-quality data products (DR1) from Hi-GAL, the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey. Hi-GAL is the keystone of a suite of continuum Galactic plane surveys from the near-IR to the radio and covers five wavebands at 70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 µm, encompassing the peak of the spectral energy distribution of cold dust for 8 < T < 50 K. This first Hi-GAL data release covers the inner Milky Way in the longitude range 68◦ > t > −70◦ in a |b| ≤ 1◦ latitude strip. ∼ ∼ ∼ ∼ Methods. Photometric maps have been produced with the ROMAGAL pipeline, which optimally capitalizes on the excellent sensitivity and stability of the bolometer arrays of the Herschel PACS and SPIRE photometric cameras. It delivers images of exquisite quality and dynamical range, absolutely calibrated with Planck and IRAS, and recovers extended emission at all wavelengths and all spatial scales, from the point-spread function to the size of an entire 2◦ × 2◦ “tile” that is the unit observing block of the survey. The compact source catalogues were generated with the CuTEx algorithm, which was specifically developed to optimise source detection and extraction in the extreme conditions of intense and spatially varying background that are found in the Galactic plane in the thermal infrared. Results. Hi-GAL DR1 images are cirrus noise limited and reach the 1σ-rms predicted by the Herschel Time Estimators for parallel-mode obser- vations at 6011 s−1 scanning speed in relatively low cirrus emission regions. Hi-GAL DR1 images will be accessible through a dedicated web-based image cutout service. The DR1 Compact Source Catalogues are delivered as single-band photometric lists containing, in addition to source posi- tion, peak, and integrated flux and source sizes, a variety of parameters useful to assess the quality and reliability of the extracted sources. Caveats and hints to help in this assessment are provided. Flux completeness limits in all bands are determined from extensive synthetic source experiments and greatly depend on the specific line of sight along the Galactic plane because the background strongly varies as a function of Galactic longitude. Hi-GAL DR1 catalogues contain 123210, 308509, 280685, 160972, and 85460 compact sources in the five bands.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
S. Molinari; E. Schisano; D. Elia; M. Pestalozzi; A. Traficante; S. Pezzuto; B. M. Swinyard; A. Noriega-Crespo; John Bally; T. J. T. Moore; R. Plume; A. Zavagno; A. M. Giorgio; S. J. Liu; G. L. Pilbratt; J. C. Mottram; D. Russeil; Lorenzo Piazzo; M. Veneziani; M. Benedettini; L. Calzoletti; F. Faustini; P. Natoli; F. Piacentini; M. Merello; A. Palmese; R. Del Grande; D. Polychroni; K. L. J. Ryg; G. Polenta
Aims. We present the first public release of high-quality data products (DR1) from Hi-GAL, the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey. Hi-GAL is the keystone of a suite of continuum Galactic plane surveys from the near-IR to the radio and covers five wavebands at 70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 µm, encompassing the peak of the spectral energy distribution of cold dust for 8 < T < 50 K. This first Hi-GAL data release covers the inner Milky Way in the longitude range 68◦ > t > −70◦ in a |b| ≤ 1◦ latitude strip. ∼ ∼ ∼ ∼ Methods. Photometric maps have been produced with the ROMAGAL pipeline, which optimally capitalizes on the excellent sensitivity and stability of the bolometer arrays of the Herschel PACS and SPIRE photometric cameras. It delivers images of exquisite quality and dynamical range, absolutely calibrated with Planck and IRAS, and recovers extended emission at all wavelengths and all spatial scales, from the point-spread function to the size of an entire 2◦ × 2◦ “tile” that is the unit observing block of the survey. The compact source catalogues were generated with the CuTEx algorithm, which was specifically developed to optimise source detection and extraction in the extreme conditions of intense and spatially varying background that are found in the Galactic plane in the thermal infrared. Results. Hi-GAL DR1 images are cirrus noise limited and reach the 1σ-rms predicted by the Herschel Time Estimators for parallel-mode obser- vations at 6011 s−1 scanning speed in relatively low cirrus emission regions. Hi-GAL DR1 images will be accessible through a dedicated web-based image cutout service. The DR1 Compact Source Catalogues are delivered as single-band photometric lists containing, in addition to source posi- tion, peak, and integrated flux and source sizes, a variety of parameters useful to assess the quality and reliability of the extracted sources. Caveats and hints to help in this assessment are provided. Flux completeness limits in all bands are determined from extensive synthetic source experiments and greatly depend on the specific line of sight along the Galactic plane because the background strongly varies as a function of Galactic longitude. Hi-GAL DR1 catalogues contain 123210, 308509, 280685, 160972, and 85460 compact sources in the five bands.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
S. Molinari; E. Schisano; D. Elia; M. Pestalozzi; A. Traficante; S. Pezzuto; B. M. Swinyard; A. Noriega-Crespo; John Bally; T. J. T. Moore; R. Plume; A. Zavagno; A. M. di Giorgio; S. J. Liu; G. L. Pilbratt; J. C. Mottram; D. Russeil; Lorenzo Piazzo; M. Veneziani; M. Benedettini; L. Calzoletti; F. Faustini; P. Natoli; F. Piacentini; M. Merello; A. Palmese; R. Del Grande; D. Polychroni; K. L. J. Rygl; G. Polenta
Aims. We present the first public release of high-quality data products (DR1) from Hi-GAL, the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey. Hi-GAL is the keystone of a suite of continuum Galactic plane surveys from the near-IR to the radio and covers five wavebands at 70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 µm, encompassing the peak of the spectral energy distribution of cold dust for 8 < T < 50 K. This first Hi-GAL data release covers the inner Milky Way in the longitude range 68◦ > t > −70◦ in a |b| ≤ 1◦ latitude strip. ∼ ∼ ∼ ∼ Methods. Photometric maps have been produced with the ROMAGAL pipeline, which optimally capitalizes on the excellent sensitivity and stability of the bolometer arrays of the Herschel PACS and SPIRE photometric cameras. It delivers images of exquisite quality and dynamical range, absolutely calibrated with Planck and IRAS, and recovers extended emission at all wavelengths and all spatial scales, from the point-spread function to the size of an entire 2◦ × 2◦ “tile” that is the unit observing block of the survey. The compact source catalogues were generated with the CuTEx algorithm, which was specifically developed to optimise source detection and extraction in the extreme conditions of intense and spatially varying background that are found in the Galactic plane in the thermal infrared. Results. Hi-GAL DR1 images are cirrus noise limited and reach the 1σ-rms predicted by the Herschel Time Estimators for parallel-mode obser- vations at 6011 s−1 scanning speed in relatively low cirrus emission regions. Hi-GAL DR1 images will be accessible through a dedicated web-based image cutout service. The DR1 Compact Source Catalogues are delivered as single-band photometric lists containing, in addition to source posi- tion, peak, and integrated flux and source sizes, a variety of parameters useful to assess the quality and reliability of the extracted sources. Caveats and hints to help in this assessment are provided. Flux completeness limits in all bands are determined from extensive synthetic source experiments and greatly depend on the specific line of sight along the Galactic plane because the background strongly varies as a function of Galactic longitude. Hi-GAL DR1 catalogues contain 123210, 308509, 280685, 160972, and 85460 compact sources in the five bands.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
D. Paradis; M. Veneziani; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; R. Paladini; F. Piacentini; J.-P. Bernard; P. de Bernardis; L. Calzoletti; F. Faustini; P. Martin; S. Masi; L. Montier; P. Natoli; I. Ristorcelli; M. A. Thompson; A. Traficante; S. Molinari