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Featured researches published by G. de Gasperis.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

A Measurement of the CMB EE Spectrum from the 2003 Flight of BOOMERANG

T. E. Montroy; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. Borrill; A. Boscaleri; P. Cabella; Carlo R. Contaldi; B. P. Crill; P. de Bernardis; G. de Gasperis; A. de Oliveira-Costa; G. De Troia; G. Di Stefano; E. Hivon; A. H. Jaffe; T. S. Kisner; W. C. Jones; A. E. Lange; S. Masi; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; C. J. MacTavish; Alessandro Melchiorri; P. Natoli; C. B. Netterfield; Enzo Pascale; F. Piacentini; D. Pogosyan; G. Polenta; S. Prunet

We report measurements of the CMB polarization power spectra from the 2003 January Antarctic flight of BOOMERANG. The primary results come from 6 days of observation of a patch covering 0.22% of the sky centered near R.A. = 825, decl. = -45


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

A measurement of the angular power spectrum of the CMB temperature anisotropy from the 2003 flight of Boomerang

W. C. Jones; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. Borrill; A. Boscaleri; P. Cabella; Carlo R. Contaldi; B. P. Crill; P. de Bernardis; G. de Gasperis; A. de Oliveira-Costa; G. De Troia; G. Di Stefano; E. Hivon; A. H. Jaffe; T. S. Kisner; A. E. Lange; C. J. MacTavish; S. Masi; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Alessandro Melchiorri; T. E. Montroy; P. Natoli; C. B. Netterfield; Enzo Pascale; F. Piacentini; D. Pogosyan; G. Polenta; S. Prunet

We report on observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) obtained during the 2003 January flight of BOOMERANG. These results are derived from 195 hr of observation with four 145 GHz polarization-sensitive bolometer (PSB) pairs, identical in design to the four 143 GHz Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) polarized pixels. The data include 75 hr of observations distributed over 1.84% of the sky with an additional 120 hr concentrated on the central portion of the field, which represents 0.22% of the full sky. From these data we derive an estimate of the angular power spectrum of temperature fluctuations of the CMB in 24 bands over the multipole range 50 ≤ l ≤ 1500. A series of features, consistent with those expected from acoustic oscillations in the primordial photon-baryon fluid, are clearly evident in the power spectrum, as is the exponential damping of power on scales smaller than the photon mean free path at the epoch of last scattering (l ≳ 900). As a consistency check, the collaboration has performed two fully independent analyses of the time-ordered data, which are found to be in excellent agreement.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Cosmological parameters from the 2003 flight of BOOMERANG

C. J. MacTavish; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. Borrill; A. Boscaleri; P. Cabella; Carlo R. Contaldi; B. P. Crill; P. de Bernardis; G. de Gasperis; A. de Oliveira-Costa; G. De Troia; G. Di Stefano; E. Hivon; A. H. Jaffe; W. C. Jones; T. S. Kisner; A. E. Lange; A. M. Lewis; S. Masi; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Alessandro Melchiorri; T. E. Montroy; P. Natoli; C. B. Netterfield; Enzo Pascale; F. Piacentini; D. Pogosyan; G. Polenta

We present the cosmological parameters from the CMB intensity and polarization power spectra of the 2003 Antarctic flight of the BOOMERANG telescope. The BOOMERANG data alone constrain the parameters of the ΛCDM model remarkably well and are consistent with constraints from a multiexperiment combined CMB data set. We add LSS data from the 2dF and SDSS redshift surveys to the combined CMB data set and test several extensions to the standard model including running of the spectral index, curvature, tensor modes, the effect of massive neutrinos, and an effective equation of state for dark energy. We also include an analysis of constraints to a model that allows a CDM isocurvature admixture.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

A measurement of Ω from the North American test flight of Boomerang

Alessandro Melchiorri; Peter A. R. Ade; P. de Bernardis; J. J. Bock; J. Borrill; A. Boscaleri; B. P. Crill; G. De Troia; P. Farese; P. G. Ferreira; K. Ganga; G. de Gasperis; M. Giacometti; V. V. Hristov; A. H. Jaffe; A. E. Lange; S. Masi; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; L. Miglio; C. B. Netterfield; Enzo Pascale; F. Piacentini; G. Romeo; J. E. Ruhl; N. Vittorio

We use the angular power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background, measured during the North American test flight of the Boomerang experiment, to constrain the geometry of the universe. Within the class of cold dark matter models, we find that the overall fractional energy density of the universe Omega is constrained to be 0.85</=Omega</=1.25 at the 68% confidence level. Combined with the COBE measurement, the data on degree scales from the Microwave Anisotropy Telescope in Chile, and the high-redshift supernovae data, we obtain new constraints on the fractional matter density and the cosmological constant.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

Instrument, method, brightness, and polarization maps from the 2003 flight of BOOMERanG

S. Masi; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. Borrill; A. Boscaleri; P. Cabella; Carlo R. Contaldi; B. P. Crill; P. de Bernardis; G. de Gasperis; A. de Oliveira-Costa; G. De Troia; G. Di Stefano; P. Ehlers; E. Hivon; V. V. Hristov; A. Iacoangeli; A. H. Jaffe; W. C. Jones; T. S. Kisner; A. E. Lange; C. J. MacTavish; C. Marini Bettolo; P. Mason; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; T. E. Montroy; F. Nati; L. Nati; P. Natoli

Aims.We present the BOOMERanG-03 experiment, and the maps of the Stokes parameters I, Q, U of the microwave sky obtained during a 14 day balloon flight in 2003. Methods.Using a balloon-borne mm-wave telescope with polarization sensitive bolometers, three regions of the southern sky were surveyed: a deep survey (~90 square degrees) and a shallow survey (~750 square degrees) at high Galactic latitudes (both centered at , Dec ~ −45°) and a survey of ~300 square degrees across the Galactic plane at , dec ~ −47° . All three surveys were carried out in three wide frequency bands centered at 145, 245 and 345 GHz, with an angular resolution of ~ . Results.The 145 GHz maps of Stokes I are dominated by Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature anisotropy, which is mapped with high signal to noise ratio. The measured anisotropy pattern is consistent with the pattern measured in the same region by BOOMERanG-98 and by WMAP. The 145 GHz maps of Stokes Q and U provide a robust statistical detection of polarization of the CMB when subjected to a power spectrum analysis. The amplitude of the detected polarization is consistent with that of the CMB in the CDM cosmological scenario. At 145 GHz, in the CMB surveys, the intensity and polarization of the astrophysical foregrounds are found to be negligible with respect to the cosmological signal. At 245 and 345 GHz we detect ISD emission correlated to the 3000 GHz IRAS/DIRBE maps, and give upper limits for any other non-CMB component. When compared to monitors of different interstellar components, the intensity maps of the surveyed section of the Galactic plane show that a variety of emission mechanisms is present in that region.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

A Map-Making algorithm for the Planck Surveyor

P. Natoli; G. de Gasperis; C. Gheller; Nicola Vittorio

We present a parallel implementation of a map-making algorithm for CMB anisotropy experiments which is both fast and efficient. We show for the first time a Maximum Likelihood, minimum variance map obtained by processing the entire data stream expected from the PLANCK Surveyor, under the assumption of a symmetric beam profile. Here we restrict ourselves to the case of the 30 GHz channel of the PLANCK Low Frequency Instrument. The extension to PLANCK higher frequency channels is straightforward. If the satellite pointing periodicity is good enough to average data that belong to the same sky circle, then the code runs very efficiently on workstations. The serial version of our code also runs on very competitive time-scales the map-making pipeline for current and forthcoming balloon borne experiments.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

PROPERTIES OF GALACTIC CIRRUS CLOUDS OBSERVED BY BOOMERANG

M. Veneziani; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; B. P. Crill; P. de Bernardis; G. de Gasperis; A. de Oliveira-Costa; G. De Troia; G. Di Stefano; K. Ganga; W. C. Jones; T. S. Kisner; A. E. Lange; C. J. MacTavish; S. Masi; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; T. E. Montroy; P. Natoli; C. B. Netterfield; Enzo Pascale; F. Piacentini; D. Pietrobon; G. Polenta; S. Ricciardi; G. Romeo; J. E. Ruhl

The physical properties of galactic cirrus emission are not well characterized. BOOMERANG is a balloon-borne experiment designed to study the cosmic microwave background at high angular resolution in the millimeter range. The BOOMERANG 245 and 345 GHz channels are sensitive to interstellar signals, in a spectral range intermediate between FIR and microwave frequencies. We look for physical characteristics of cirrus structures in a region at high galactic latitudes (b ~ –40°) where BOOMERANG performed its deepest integration, combining the BOOMERANG data with other available data sets at different wavelengths. We have detected eight emission patches in the 345 GHz map, consistent with cirrus dust in the Infrared Astronomical Satellite maps. The analysis technique we have developed allows us to identify the location and the shape of cirrus clouds, and to extract the flux from observations with different instruments at different wavelengths and angular resolutions. We study the integrated flux emitted from these cirrus clouds using data from Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), DIRBE, BOOMERANG and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe in the frequency range 23-3000 GHz (13 mm-100 μm wavelength). We fit the measured spectral energy distributions with a combination of a gray body and a power-law spectra considering two models for the thermal emission. The temperature of the thermal dust component varies in the 7-20 K range and its emissivity spectral index is in the 1-5 range. We identified a physical relation between temperature and spectral index as had been proposed in previous works. This technique can be proficiently used for the forthcoming Planck and Herschel missions data.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The data reduction pipeline for the Hi-GAL survey

E. Schisano; S. Pezzuto; F. Piacentini; B. Ali; G. de Gasperis; G. Polenta; P. Natoli; M. Pestalozzi; A Traficante; S. Molinari; A. M. di Giorgio; D. Ikhenaode; Lorenzo Piazzo; M. Veneziani; L. Calzoletti

We present the data reduction pipeline for the Herschel Infrared Galactic Plane survey (Hi-GAL). Hi-GAL is a key project of the Herschel satellite, which is mapping the inner part of the Galactic plane (|l| ≤ 70° and |b| ≤ 1°), using two Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) and three Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) frequency bands, from 70 to 500 μm. Our pipeline relies only partially on the Herschel Interactive Processing Environment (hipe). It features several newly developed routines to perform data reduction, including accurate data culling, noise estimation and minimum variance map-making, the latter performed with the romagal algorithm, a deep modification of the roma code already tested on cosmological surveys. We discuss in depth the properties of the Hi-GAL science demonstration phase data.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Making Sky Maps from Planck Data

M. Ashdown; C. Baccigalupi; A. Balbi; James G. Bartlett; J. Borrill; C. Cantalupo; G. de Gasperis; K. M. Górski; E. Hivon; E. Keihänen; H. Kurki-Suonio; C. R. Lawrence; P. Natoli; T. Poutanen; S. Prunet; M. Reinecke; R. Stompor; Benjamin D. Wandelt

Aims. We compare the performance of multiple codes written by different groups for making polarized maps from Planck-sized, all-sky cosmic microwave background (CMB) data. Three of the codes are based on a destriping algorithm; the other three are implementations of an optimal maximum-likelihood algorithm. Methods. Time-ordered data (TOD) were simulated using the Planck Level-S simulation pipeline. Several cases of temperature-only data were run to test that the codes could handle large datasets, and to explore effects such as the precision of the pointing data. Based on these preliminary results, TOD were generated for a set of four 217 GHz detectors (the minimum number required to produce I, Q, and U maps) under two different scanning strategies, with and without noise. Results. Following correction of various problems revealed by the early simulation, all codes were able to handle the large data volume that Planck will produce. Differences in maps produced are small but noticeable; differences in computing resources are large.


Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics | 2002

The BOOMERanG experiment and the curvature of the Universe

S. Masi; P. de Bernardis; G. De Troia; M. Giacometti; A. Iacoangeli; F. Piacentini; G. Polenta; Peter A. R. Ade; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; C. R. Contaldi; Dmitry Pogosyan; S. Prunet; J. Borrill; A. Boscaleri; Enzo Pascale; K. Coble; P. Farese; T. E. Montroy; J. E. Ruhl; B. P. Crill; V. V. Hristov; W. C. Jones; A. E. Lange; P. Mason; G. de Gasperis; P. Natoli; K. Ganga; E. Hivon

We describe the BOOMERanG experiment and its main result, i.e. the measurement of the large scale curvature of the Universe. BOOMERanG is a balloon-borne microwave telescope with sensitive cryogenic detectors. BOOMERanG has measured the angular distribution of the Cosmic Microwave Background on ∼ 3% of the sky, with a resolution of ∼ 10 arcmin and a sensitivity of ∼ 20μK per pixel. The resulting image is dominated by hot and cold spots with rms fluctuations ∼ 80μK and typical size of ∼ 1o. The detailed angular power spectrum of the image features three peaks and two dips at l = (213−13+10), (541−32+20), (845−25+12) and l = (416−12+22), (750−750+20), respectively. Such very characteristic spectrum can be explained assuming that the detected structures are the result of acoustic oscillations in the primeval plasma. In this framework, the measured pattern constrains the density parameter Ω to be 0.85 < Ω < 1.1 (95% confidence interval). Other cosmological parameters, like the spectral index of initial density fluctuations, the density parameter for baryons, dark matter and dark energy, are detected or constrained by the BOOMERanG measurements and by other recent CMB anisotropy experiments. When combined with other cosmological observations, these results depict a new, consistent, cosmological scenario.

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P. de Bernardis

Sapienza University of Rome

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J. Borrill

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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P. Natoli

Sapienza University of Rome

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E. Hivon

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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G. De Troia

Sapienza University of Rome

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J. J. Bock

California Institute of Technology

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A. E. Lange

California Institute of Technology

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F. Piacentini

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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B. P. Crill

California Institute of Technology

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