Flavio D’Amico
National Institute for Space Research
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Featured researches published by Flavio D’Amico.
Experimental Astronomy | 2013
Paolo Soffitta; X. Barcons; R. Bellazzini; Joao Braga; Enrico Costa; George W. Fraser; Szymon Gburek; J. Huovelin; Giorgio Matt; M. Pearce; Juri Poutanen; V. Reglero; A. Santangelo; R. Sunyaev; Gianpiero Tagliaferri; Martin C. Weisskopf; Roberto Aloisio; E. Amato; Primo Attinà; Magnus Axelsson; L. Baldini; S. Basso; Stefano Bianchi; Pasquale Blasi; J. Bregeon; Alessandro Brez; N. Bucciantini; L. Burderi; Vadim Burwitz; P. Casella
Abstract X-ray polarimetry, sometimes alone, and sometimes coupled to spectral and temporal variability measurements and to imaging, allows a wealth of physical phenomena in astrophysics to be studied. X-ray polarimetry investigates the acceleration process, for example, including those typical of magnetic reconnection in solar flares, but also emission in the strong magnetic fields of neutron stars and white dwarfs. It detects scattering in asymmetric structures such as accretion disks and columns, and in the so-called molecular torus and ionization cones. In addition, it allows fundamental physics in regimes of gravity and of magnetic field intensity not accessible to experiments on the Earth to be probed. Finally, models that describe fundamental interactions (e.g. quantum gravity and the extension of the Standard Model) can be tested. We describe in this paper the X-ray Imaging Polarimetry Explorer (XIPE), proposed in June 2012 to the first ESA call for a small mission with a launch in 2017. The proposal was, unfortunately, not selected. To be compliant with this schedule, we designed the payload mostly with existing items. The XIPE proposal takes advantage of the completed phase A of POLARIX for an ASI small mission program that was cancelled, but is different in many aspects: the detectors, the presence of a solar flare polarimeter and photometer and the use of a light platform derived by a mass production for a cluster of satellites. XIPE is composed of two out of the three existing JET-X telescopes with two Gas Pixel Detectors (GPD) filled with a He-DME mixture at their focus. Two additional GPDs filled with a 3-bar Ar-DME mixture always face the Sun to detect polarization from solar flares. The Minimum Detectable Polarization of a 1 mCrab source reaches 14 % in the 2–10 keV band in 105 s for pointed observations, and 0.6 % for an X10 class solar flare in the 15–35 keV energy band. The imaging capability is 24 arcsec Half Energy Width (HEW) in a Field of View of 14.7 arcmin × 14.7 arcmin. The spectral resolution is 20 % at 6 keV and the time resolution is 8 μs. The imaging capabilities of the JET-X optics and of the GPD have been demonstrated by a recent calibration campaign at PANTER X-ray test facility of the Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik (MPE, Germany). XIPE takes advantage of a low-earth equatorial orbit with Malindi as down-link station and of a Mission Operation Center (MOC) at INPE (Brazil). The data policy is organized with a Core Program that comprises three months of Science Verification Phase and 25 % of net observing time in the following 2 years. A competitive Guest Observer program covers the remaining 75 % of the net observing time.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
M. Castro; Flavio D’Amico; Joao Braga; T. Maiolino; Katja Pottschmidt; J. Wilms
Hard X-ray spectra of black hole binaries in the low/hard state are well modeled by thermal Comptonization of soft seed photons by a corona-type region with
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
T. Maiolino; Flavio D’Amico; Joao Braga
kT
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2002
Joao Braga; Flavio D’Amico; Thyrso Villela; Jorge Mejía; Raphael A. Fonseca; Elisete Rinke
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arXiv: Astrophysics | 2002
Flavio D’Amico; William Adams Heindl; Richard E. Rothschild; D. E. Gruber
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Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1999
Flavio D’Amico; Margarida M. Hamada; Carlos Henrique de Mesquita; Jose M. Vieira; Nélson Pereira da Costa; Thyrso Villela; Joao Braga
{\thinspace}keV and optical depth around 1. Previous spectral studies of 1E{\thinspace}1740.7
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Paulo Eduardo Stecchini; Manuel J. Castro; Francisco Jose Jablonski; Flavio D’Amico; Joao Braga
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Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016
Ana Virginia Penacchioni; Joao Braga; M.A. Castro Avila; Flavio D’Amico
2942, including both the soft and the hard X-ray bands, were always limited by gaps in the spectra or by a combination of observations with imaging and non-imaging instruments. In this study, we have used three rare nearly-simultaneous observations of 1E{\thinspace}1740.7
arXiv: Astrophysics | 2006
Flavio D’Amico; Francisco Jose Jablonski; C. V. Rodrigues; D. Cieslinski; Gabriel R. Hickel
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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
Joao Braga; Flavio D’Amico; Manuel A. C. Avila; Ana V. Penacchioni; J. Rodrigo Sacahui; Valdivino Santiago; Fátima Mattiello-Francisco; Cesar Strauss; Márcio A.A. Fialho
1942 by both XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL satellites to combine spectra from four different imaging instruments with no data gaps, and we successfully applied the Comptonization scenario to explain the broadband X-ray spectra of this source in the low/hard state. For two of the three observations, our analysis also shows that, models including Compton reflection can adequately fit the data, in agreement with previous reports. We show that the observations can also be modeled by a more detailed Comptonization scheme. Furthermore, we find the presence of an iron K-edge absorption feature in one occasion, which confirms what had been previously observed by Suzaku. Our broadband analysis of this limited sample shows a rich spectral variability in 1E{\thinspace}1740.7