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Featured researches published by F. Schillirò.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Status of the Sardinia Radio Telescope project

Gianni Tofani; Gianni Alvito; Roberto Ambrosini; Pietro Bolli; Claudio Bortolotti; Loredana Bruca; Franco Buffa; Alessandro Cattani; Gianni Comoretto; Andrea Cremonini; Luca Cresci; Nichi DAmico; Gian Luigi Deiana; Antonietta Fara; L. Feretti; Franco Fiocchi; Enrico Flamini; Flavio Fusi Pecci; Gavril Grueff; Giuseppe Maccaferri; Andrea Maccaferri; F. Mantovani; Sergio Mariotti; Carlo Migoni; Filippo Messina; Jader Monari; Marco Morsiani; M. Murgia; José Musmeci; Mauro Nanni

We present the status of the Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT) project, a new general purpose, fully steerable 64 m diameter parabolic radiotelescope capable to operate with high efficiency in the 0.3-116 GHz frequency range. The instrument is the result of a scientific and technical collaboration among three Structures of the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF): the Institute of Radio Astronomy of Bologna, the Cagliari Astronomy Observatory (in Sardinia,) and the Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory in Florence. Funding agencies are the Italian Ministry of Education and Scientific Research, the Sardinia Regional Government, and the Italian Space Agency (ASI,) that has recently rejoined the project. The telescope site is about 35 km North of Cagliari. The radio telescope has a shaped Gregorian optical configuration with a 7.9 m diameter secondary mirror and supplementary Beam-WaveGuide (BWG) mirrors. With four possible focal positions (primary, Gregorian, and two BWGs), SRT will be able to allocate up to 20 remotely controllable receivers. One of the most advanced technical features of the SRT is the active surface: the primary mirror will be composed by 1008 panels supported by electromechanical actuators digitally controlled to compensate for gravitational deformations. With the completion of the foundation on spring 2006 the SRT project entered its final construction phase. This paper reports on the latest advances on the SRT project.


Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union | 2009

Water masers in the Kronian system

Sergei V. Pogrebenko; Leonid I. Gurvits; Moshe Elitzur; Cristiano Batalli Cosmovici; Ian Avruch; S. Pluchino; Stelio Montebugnoli; E. Salerno; Giuseppe Maccaferri; Ari Mujunen; Jouko Ritakari; Guifre Molera; Jan Wagner; Minttu Uunila; Giuseppe Cimo; F. Schillirò; Marco Bartolini; J. A. Fernández; D. Lazzaro; D. Prialnik; R. Schulz

The presence of water has been considered for a long time as a key condition for life in planetary environments. The Cassini mission discovered water vapour in the Kronian system by detecting absorption of UV emission from a background star (Hansen et al. 2006). Prompted by this discovery, we started an observational campaign for search of another manifestation of the water vapour in the Kronian system, its maser emission at the frequency of 22 GHz (1.35 cm wavelength). Observations with the 32 m Medicina radio telescope (INAF-IRA, Italy) started in 2006 using Mk5A data recording and the JIVE-Huygens software correlator. Later on, an on-line spectrometer was used at Medicina. The 14 m Metsahovi radio telescope (TKK-MRO, Finland) joined the observational campaign in 2008 using a locally developed data capture unit and software spectrometer. More than 300 hours of observations were collected in 2006-2008 campaign with the two radio telescopes. The data were analysed at JIVE using the Doppler tracking technique to compensate the observed spectra for the radial Doppler shift for various bodies in the Kronian system (Pogrebenko et al. 2009). Here we report the observational results for Hyperion, Titan, Enceladus and Atlas, and their physical interpretation. Encouraged by these results we started a campaign of follow up observations including other radio telescopes.


Radio Science | 2016

From MAD to SAD: The Italian experience for the Low Frequency Aperture Array of SKA1‐LOW

Pietro Bolli; G. Pupillo; Giuseppe Virone; Andrea Maria Lingua; A. Mattana; Jader Monari; M. Murgia; G. Naldi; Fabio Paonessa; Federico Perini; S. Pluchino; S. Rusticelli; Marco Schiaffino; F. Schillirò; Giovanni Tartarini; Alberto Tibaldi

This paper describes two small aperture array demonstrators called Medicina and Sardinia Array Demonstrators (MAD and SAD, respectively). The objectives of these instruments are to acquire experience and test new technologies for a possible application to the low-frequency aperture array of the low-frequency telescope of the Square Kilometer Array phase 1 (SKA1-LOW). The MAD experience was concluded in 2014, and it turned out to be an important test bench for implementing calibration techniques based on an artificial source mounted in an aerial vehicle. SAD is based on 128 dual-polarized Vivaldi antennas and is 1 order of magnitude larger than MAD. The architecture and the station size of SAD, which is along the construction phase, are more similar to those under evaluation for SKA1-LOW, and therefore, SAD is expected to provide useful hints for SKA1-LOW.


international conference on electromagnetics in advanced applications | 2015

Sardinia Array Demonstrator: Instrument overview and status

Pietro Bolli; Giovanni Comoretto; D. Dallacasa; D. Fierro; F. Gaudiomonte; F. Govoni; Andrea Maria Lingua; P. Marongiu; A. Mattana; A. Melis; Jader Monari; M. Murgia; L. Mureddu; G. Naldi; Fabio Paonessa; Federico Perini; T. Pisanu; A. Poddighe; I. Porceddu; I. Prandoni; G. Pupillo; S. Rusticelli; Marco Schiaffino; F. Schillirò; G. Serra; Giovanni Tartarini; Alberto Tibaldi; T. Venturi; Giuseppe Virone; A. Zanichelli

In the framework of the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) project, the Italian Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) has addressed several efforts in the design and prototyping of aperture arrays for low-frequency radio astronomical research. The Sardinia Array Demonstrator (SAD) is a national project aimed to develop know-how in this area and to test different architectural technologies and calibration algorithms. SAD consists of 128 prototypical dual-polarized Vivaldi antennas designed to operate at radio frequencies below 650 MHz. The antennas will be deployed at the Sardinia Radio Telescopes site with a versatile approach able to provide two different array configurations: (i) all antennas grouped in one large station or (ii) spread among a core plus few satellite stations. This paper provides an overview of the SAD project from an instrumental point of view, and illustrates its status after 2 years from its start.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Sardinia aperture array demonstrator

M. Murgia; G. Bianchi; Pietro Bolli; Giovanni Comoretto; D. Dallacasa; F. Gaudiomonte; L. Gregorini; F. Govoni; K.-H. Mack; M. Massardi; A. Mattana; A. Melis; Jader Monari; L. Mureddu; G. Naldi; Fabio Paonessa; Federico Perini; A. Poddighe; I. Porceddu; I. Prandoni; G. Pupillo; Marco Schiaffino; F. Schillirò; G. Serra; Alberto Tibaldi; T. Venturi; Giuseppe Virone; A. Zanichelli

We present a project aimed at realizing an Italian aperture array demonstrator constituted by prototypical Vivaldi antennas designed to operate at radio frequencies below 500 MHz. We focus on an array composed of a core plus a few satellite phased-array stations to be installed at the Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT) site. The antenna elements are mobile and thus it will be possible to investigate the performance in terms of both uv-coverage and synthesized resolution resulting from different configurations of the array.


Journal of Astronomical Instrumentation | 2017

The Digital Signal Processing Platform for the Low Frequency Aperture Array: Preliminary Results on the Data Acquisition Unit

G. Naldi; A. Mattana; Sandro Pastore; Monica Alderighi; Kristian Zarb Adami; F. Schillirò; Amin Aminaei; Jeremy Baker; Carolina Belli; Gianni Comoretto; Simone Chiarucci; Riccardo Chiello; Sergio D’Angelo; Gabriele Dalle Mura; Andrea De Marco; Rob Halsall; Alessio Magro; Jader Monari; Matthew J. Roberts; Federico Perini; M. Poloni; G. Pupillo; Simone Rusticelli; Marco Schiaffino; Emanuele Zaccaro

A signal processing hardware platform has been developed for the Low Frequency Aperture Array component of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA). The processing board, called an Analog Digital Unit (ADU), is able to acquire and digitize broadband (up to 500MHz bandwidth) radio-frequency streams from 16 dual polarized antennas, channel the data streams and then combine them flexibly as part of a larger beamforming system. It is envisaged that there will be more than 8000 of these signal processing platforms in the first phase of the SKA, so particular attention has been devoted to ensure the design is low-cost and low-power. This paper describes the main features of the data acquisition unit of such a platform and presents preliminary results characterizing its performance.


ursi general assembly and scientific symposium | 2017

The low frequency receivers for SKA 1-low: Design and verification

P. Benthem; Marchei Gerbers; Jan Geralt bij de Vaate; Stefan Wynholds; Jeanette Bast; Tom Booler; Tim Colgate; B. Crosse; D. Emrich; Peter Hall; Budi Juswardy; David Kerniey; Franz Schlagenhaufer; Marcin Sokolowski; Adrian Sutinjo; Daniel Ung; R. B. Wayth; Andrew Williams; Monica Alderighi; Pietro Bolli; Gianni Comoretto; A. Mattana; Jader Monari; G. Naldi; Frederico Perini; G. Pupillo; S. Rusticelli; Marco Schiaffmo; F. Schillirò; Amin Aminei

The initial phase of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) [1] is represented by a −10% instrument and construction should start in 2018. SKA 1-Low, a sparse Aperture Array (AA) covering the frequency range 50 to 350 MHz, will be part of this. This instrument will consist of 512 stations, each hosting 256 antennas creating a total of 131,072 antennas. A first verification system towards SKA 1-Low, Aperture Array Verification System 1 (AAVSl), is being deployed and validated in 2017.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The design of the local monitor and control system of SKA dishes

F. Schillirò; V. Baldini; Ugo Becciani; R. Cirami; Alessandro Costa; A. Ingallinera; Alessandro Marassi; G. Nicotra; C. Nocita; S. Riggi; C. Trigilio

The Square Kilometer Array (SKA) project aims at building the world’s largest radio observatory to observe the sky with unprecedented sensitivity and collecting area. In the first phase of the project (SKA1), an array of dishes, SKA1-MID, will be built in South Africa. It will consist of 133 15m-dishes, which will include the MeerKAT array, for the 0.350-20 GHz frequency band observations. Each antenna will be provided with a local monitor and control system (LMC), enabling operations both to the Telescope Manager remote system, and to the engineers and maintenance staff; it provides different environment for the telescope control (positioning, pointing, observational bands), metadata collection for monitoring and database storaging, operational modes and functional states management for all the telescope capabilities. In this paper we present the LMC software architecture designed for the detailed design phase (DD), where we describe functional and physical interfaces with monitored and controlled sub-elements, and highlight the data flow between each LMC modules and its sub-element controllers from one side, and Telescope Manager on the other side. We also describe the complete Product Breakdown Structure (PBS) created in order to optimize resources allocation in terms of calculus and memory, able to perform required task for each element according to the proper requirements. Among them, time response and system reliability are the most important, considering the complexity of SKA dish network and its isolated placement. Performances obtained by software implementation using TANGO framework will be discussed, matching them with technical requirements derived by SKA science drivers.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

A real-time KLT implementation for radio-SETI applications

A. Melis; Raimondo Concu; Pierpaolo Pari; Claudio Maccone; Stelio Montebugnoli; A. Possenti; G. Valente; Nicoló Antonietti; D. Perrodin; Carlo Migoni; M. Murgia; Alessio Trois; Massimo Barbaro; Alessandro Bocchinu; Silvia Casu; Maria Ilaria Lunesu; Jader Monari; Alessandro Navarrini; Tonino Pisanu; F. Schillirò; Valentina Vacca

SETI, the Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence, is the search for radio signals emitted by alien civilizations living in the Galaxy. Narrow-band FFT-based approaches have been preferred in SETI, since their computation time only grows like N*lnN, where N is the number of time samples. On the contrary, a wide-band approach based on the Kahrunen-Lo`eve Transform (KLT) algorithm would be preferable, but it would scale like N*N. In this paper, we describe a hardware-software infrastructure based on FPGA boards and GPU-based PCs that circumvents this computation-time problem allowing for a real-time KLT.


Journal of Astronomical Instrumentation | 2017

The Signal Processing Firmware for the Low Frequency Aperture Array

Gianni Comoretto; Riccardo Chiello; Matthew J. Roberts; Rob Halsall; Kristian Zarb Adami; Monica Alderighi; Amin Aminaei; Jeremy Baker; Carolina Belli; Simone Chiarucci; Sergio D’Angelo; Andrea De Marco; Gabriele Dalle Mura; Alessio Magro; A. Mattana; Jader Monari; G. Naldi; Sandro Pastore; Federico Perini; M. Poloni; G. Pupillo; Simone Rusticelli; Marco Schiaffino; F. Schillirò; Emanuele Zaccaro

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