L. Stringhetti
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Featured researches published by L. Stringhetti.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
J. P. Leahy; M. Bersanelli; O. D'Arcangelo; K. Ganga; S. Leach; A. Moss; E. Keihänen; Reijo Keskitalo; H. Kurki-Suonio; T. Poutanen; M. Sandri; D. Scott; J. A. Tauber; L. Valenziano; F. Villa; A. Wilkinson; A. Zonca; C. Baccigalupi; J. Borrill; R. C. Butler; F. Cuttaia; R. J. Davis; M. Frailis; E. Francheschi; S. Galeotta; A. Gregorio; R. Leonardi; N. Mandolesi; M. Maris; P. R. Meinhold
We present a system-level description of the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) considered as a differencing polarimeter, and evaluate its expected performance. The LFI is one of the two instruments on board the ESA Planck mission to study the cosmic microwave background. It consists of a set of 22 radiometers sensitive to linear polarisation, arranged in orthogonally-oriented pairs connected to 11 feed horns operating at 30, 44 and 70 GHz. In our analysis, the generic Jones and Mueller-matrix formulations for polarimetry are adapted to the special case of the LFI. Laboratory measurements of flight components are combined with optical simulations of the telescope to investigate the values and uncertainties in the system parameters affecting polarisation response. Methods of correcting residual systematic errors are also briefly discussed. The LFI has beam-integrated polarisation efficiency >99% for all detectors, with uncertainties below 0.1%. Indirect assessment of polarisation position angles suggests that uncertainties are generally less than 0°.5, and this will be checked in flight using observations of the Crab nebula. Leakage of total intensity into the polarisation signal is generally well below the thermal noise level except for bright Galactic emission, where the dominant effect is likely to be spectral-dependent terms due to bandpass mismatch between the two detectors behind each feed, contributing typically 1–3% leakage of foreground total intensity. Comparable leakage from compact features occurs due to beam mismatch, but this averages to < 5 × 10^(-4) for large-scale emission. An inevitable feature of the LFI design is that the two components of the linear polarisation are recovered from elliptical beams which differ substantially in orientation. This distorts the recovered polarisation and its angular power spectrum, and several methods are being developed to correct the effect, both in the power spectrum and in the sky maps. The LFI will return a high-quality measurement of the CMB polarisation, limited mainly by thermal noise. To meet our aspiration of measuring polarisation at the 1% level, further analysis of flight and ground data is required. We are still researching the most effective techniques for correcting subtle artefacts in polarisation; in particular the correction of bandpass mismatch effects is a formidable challenge, as it requires multi-band analysis to estimate the spectral indices that control the leakage.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2009
L. Valenziano; F. Cuttaia; A. De Rosa; L. Terenzi; A Brighenti; G P Cazzola; A Garbesi; S Mariotti; G Orsi; L. Pagan; F. Cavaliere; M. Biggi; R. Lapini; E Panagin; Paola Battaglia; R. C. Butler; M. Bersanelli; O. D'Arcangelo; S Levin; Nazzareno Mandolesi; A. Mennella; G. Morgante; G. Morigi; M. Sandri; A. Simonetto; M. Tomasi; F. Villa; M. Frailis; S. Galeotta; A. Gregorio
The LFI radiometers use a pseudo-correlation design where the signal from the sky is continuously compared with a stable reference signal, provided by a cryogenic reference load system. The reference unit is composed by small pyramidal horns, one for each radiometer, 22 in total, facing small absorbing targets, made of a commercial resin ECCOSORB CRTM, cooled to ~ 4.5 K. Horns and targets are separated by a small gap to allow thermal decoupling. Target and horn design is optimized for each of the LFI bands, centered at 70, 44 and 30 GHz. Pyramidal horns are either machined inside the radiometer 20K module or connected via external electro-formed bended waveguides. The requirement of high stability of the reference signal imposed a careful design for the radiometric and thermal properties of the loads. Materials used for the manufacturing have been characterized for thermal, RF and mechanical properties. We describe in this paper the design and the performance of the reference system.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
S. Aiola; G. Amico; P. Battaglia; E. S. Battistelli; A. Baù; P. de Bernardis; M. Bersanelli; A. Boscaleri; F. Cavaliere; A. Coppolecchia; A. Cruciani; F. Cuttaia; A. D'Addabbo; G. D'Alessandro; S. De Gregori; F. Del Torto; M. De Petris; L. Fiorineschi; C. Franceschet; E. Franceschi; M. Gervasi; D. J. Goldie; Anna Gregorio; Victor Haynes; N. Krachmalnicoff; L. Lamagna; B. Maffei; D. Maino; S. Masi; A. Mennella
The LSPE is a balloon-borne mission aimed at measuring the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) at large angular scales, and in particular to constrain the curl component of CMB polarization (B-modes) produced by tensor perturbations generated during cosmic inflation, in the very early universe. Its primary target is to improve the limit on the ratio of tensor to scalar perturbations amplitudes down to r = 0.03, at 99.7% confidence. A second target is to produce wide maps of foreground polarization generated in our Galaxy by synchrotron emission and interstellar dust emission. These will be important to map Galactic magnetic fields and to study the properties of ionized gas and of diffuse interstellar dust in our Galaxy. The mission is optimized for large angular scales, with coarse angular resolution (around 1.5 degrees FWHM), and wide sky coverage (25% of the sky). The payload will fly in a circumpolar long duration balloon mission during the polar night. Using the Earth as a giant solar shield, the instrument will spin in azimuth, observing a large fraction of the northern sky. The payload will host two instruments. An array of coherent polarimeters using cryogenic HEMT amplifiers will survey the sky at 43 and 90 GHz. An array of bolometric polarimeters, using large throughput multi-mode bolometers and rotating Half Wave Plates (HWP), will survey the same sky region in three bands at 95, 145 and 245 GHz. The wide frequency coverage will allow optimal control of the polarized foregrounds, with comparable angular resolution at all frequencies.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
A. Mennella; M. Bersanelli; R. C. Butler; F. Cuttaia; O. D'Arcangelo; R. J. Davis; M. Frailis; S. Galeotta; A. Gregorio; C. R. Lawrence; R. Leonardi; S. R. Lowe; Nazzareno Mandolesi; M. Maris; P. R. Meinhold; L. Mendes; G. Morgante; M. Sandri; L. Stringhetti; L. Terenzi; M. Tomasi; L. Valenziano; F. Villa; A. Zacchei; A. Zonca; M. Balasini; C. Franceschet; P. Battaglia; P. M. Lapolla; P. Leutenegger
We present the calibration and scientific performance parameters of the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) measured during the ground cryogenic test campaign. These parameters characterise the instrument response and constitute our optimal pre-launch knowledge of the LFI scientific performance. The LFI shows excellent 1/f stability and rejection of instrumental systematic effects; its measured noise performance shows that LFI is the most sensitive instrument of its kind. The calibration parameters will be updated during flight operations until the end of the mission.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2009
R. J. Davis; A. Wilkinson; R D Davies; W F Winder; N. Roddis; E. Blackhurst; D Lawson; S. R. Lowe; C Baines; M Butlin; A Galtress; D Shepherd; B. Aja; E. Artal; M. Bersanelli; R. C. Butler; C Castelli; F. Cuttaia; O. D'Arcangelo; T. Gaier; R. Hoyland; D. Kettle; R. Leonardi; Nazzareno Mandolesi; A. Mennella; P. R. Meinhold; M Pospieszalski; L. Stringhetti; M. Tomasi; L. Valenziano
We give a description of the design, construction and testing of the 30 and 44 GHz Front End Modules (FEMs) for the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) of the Planck mission to be launched in 2009. The scientific requirements of the mission determine the performance parameters to be met by the FEMs, including their linear polarization characteristics. The FEM design is that of a differential pseudo-correlation radiometer in which the signal from the sky is compared with a 4-K blackbody load. The Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) at the heart of the FEM is based on indium phosphide High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMTs). The radiometer incorporates a novel phase-switch design which gives excellent amplitude and phase match across the band. The noise temperature requirements are met within the measurement errors at the two frequencies. For the most sensitive LNAs, the noise temperature at the band centre is 3 and 5 times the quantum limit at 30 and 44 GHz respectively. For some of the FEMs, the noise temperature is still falling as the ambient temperature is reduced to 20 K. Stability tests of the FEMs, including a measurement of the 1/f knee frequency, also meet mission requirements. The 30 and 44 GHz FEMs have met or bettered the mission requirements in all critical aspects. The most sensitive LNAs have reached new limits of noise temperature for HEMTs at their band centres. The FEMs have well-defined linear polarization characteristcs.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2009
J. Varis; N. Hughes; M. Laaninen; V. H. Kilpiä; P. Jukkala; J. Tuovinen; S. Ovaska; P. Sjoman; P. Kangaslahti; T. Gaier; R. Hoyland; P. R. Meinhold; A. Mennella; M. Bersanelli; R. C. Butler; F. Cuttaia; E. Franceschi; R. Leonardi; P. Leutenegger; M. Malaspina; N. Mandolesi; M. Miccolis; T. Poutanen; H. Kurki-Suonio; M. Sandri; L. Stringhetti; L. Terenzi; M. Tomasi; L. Valenziano
70 GHz radiometer front-end and back-end modules for the Low Frequency Instrument of the European Space Agencys Planck Mission were built and tested. The operating principles and the design details of the mechanical structures are described along with the key InP MMIC low noise amplifiers and phase switches of the units. The units were tested in specially designed cryogenic vacuum chambers capable of producing the operating conditions required for Planck radiometers, specifically, a physical temperature of 20 K for the front-end modules, 300 K for the back-end modules and 4 K for the reference signal sources. Test results of the low noise amplifiers and phase switches, the front and back-end modules, and the combined results of both modules are discussed. At 70 GHz frequency, the system noise temperature of the front and back end is 28 K; the effective bandwidth 16 GHz, and the 1/f spectrum knee frequency is 38 mHz.The test results indicate state-of-the-art performance at 70 GHz frequency and fulfil the Planck performance requirements.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
M. Bersanelli; A. Mennella; G. Morgante; M. Zannoni; Giuseppe Addamo; A. Baschirotto; P. Battaglia; A. Baù; B. Cappellini; F. Cavaliere; F. Cuttaia; F. Del Torto; S. Donzelli; Z. Farooqui; M. Frailis; C. Franceschet; E. Franceschi; T. Gaier; S. Galeotta; M. Gervasi; A. Gregorio; Pekka Kangaslahti; N. Krachmalnicoff; C. R. Lawrence; G. Maggio; R. Mainini; D. Maino; Nazzareno Mandolesi; B. Paroli; A. Passerini
We discuss the design and expected performance of STRIP (STRatospheric Italian Polarimeter), an array of coherent receivers designed to fly on board the LSPE (Large Scale Polarization Explorer) balloon experiment. The STRIP focal plane array comprises 49 elements in Q band and 7 elements in W-band using cryogenic HEMT low noise amplifiers and high performance waveguide components. In operation, the array will be cooled to 20 K and placed in the focal plane of a ~0.6 meter telescope providing an angular resolution of ~1.5 degrees. The LSPE experiment aims at large scale, high sensitivity measurements of CMB polarization, with multi-frequency deep measurements to optimize component separation. The STRIP Q-band channel is crucial to accurately measure and remove the synchrotron polarized component, while the W-band channel, together with a bolometric channel at the same frequency, provides a crucial cross-check for systematic effects.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2009
E. Artal; B. Aja; M. L. de la Fuente; J. P. Pascual; A. Mediavilla; E. Martínez-González; L. Pradell; P. de Paco; M. Bara; E. Blanco; E. Garcia; R. J. Davis; D. Kettle; N. Roddis; A. Wilkinson; M. Bersanelli; A. Mennella; M. Tomasi; R. C. Butler; F. Cuttaia; N. Mandolesi; L. Stringhetti
The 30 and 44 GHz Back End Modules (BEM) for the Planck Low Frequency Instrument are broadband receivers (20% relative bandwidth) working at room temperature. The signals coming from the Front End Module are amplified, band pass filtered and finally converted to DC by a detector diode. Each receiver has two identical branches following the differential scheme of the Planck radiometers. The BEM design is based on MMIC Low Noise Amplifiers using GaAs P-HEMT devices, microstrip filters and Schottky diode detectors. Their manufacturing development has included elegant breadboard prototypes and finally qualification and flight model units. Electrical, mechanical and environmental tests were carried out for the characterization and verification of the manufactured BEMs. A description of the 30 and 44 GHz Back End Modules of Planck-LFI radiometers is given, with details of the tests done to determine their electrical and environmental performances. The electrical performances of the 30 and 44 GHz Back End Modules: frequency response, effective bandwidth, equivalent noise temperature, 1/f noise and linearity are presented.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2009
A. Mennella; F. Villa; L. Terenzi; F. Cuttaia; P. Battaglia; M. Bersanelli; R. C. Butler; O. D'Arcangelo; E. Artal; R. J. Davis; M. Frailis; C. Franceschet; S. Galeotta; A. Gregorio; N. Hughes; P. Jukkala; D. Kettle; V. H. Kilpiä; M. Laaninen; P. M. Lapolla; R. Leonardi; P. Leutenegger; S. R. Lowe; Nazzareno Mandolesi; M. Maris; P. R. Meinhold; L. Mendes; M. Miccolis; G. Morgante; N. Roddis
In this paper we discuss the linearity response of the Planck-LFI receivers, with particular reference to signal compression measured on the 30 and 44 GHz channels. In the article we discuss the various sources of compression and present a model that accurately describes data measured during tests performed with individual radiomeric chains. After discussing test results we present the best parameter set representing the receiver response and discuss the impact of non linearity on in-flight calibration, which is shown to be negligible.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
O. Catalano; Maria Concetta Maccarone; C. Gargano; Giovanni La Rosa; A. Segreto; G. Sottile; Vincenzo De Caprio; F. Russo; Milvia Capalbi; Pierluca Sangiorgi; G. Bonanno; A. Grillo; S. Garozzo; D. Marano; S. Billotta; G. Romeo; L. Stringhetti; M. Fiorini; Nicola La Palombara; S. Incorvaia; Giorgio Toso; D. Impiombato; Salvatore Giarrusso
In the context of the Cherenkov Telescope Array observatory project, the ASTRI SST-2M end-to-end prototype telescope, entirely supported by the Italian National Institute of Astrophysics, is designed to detect cosmic primary gamma ray energies from few TeV up to hundreds of TeV. The ASTRI SST-2M prototype camera is part of the challenging synergy of novel optical design, camera sensors, front-end electronics and telescope structure design. The camera is devoted to imaging and recording the Cherenkov images of air showers induced by primary particles into the Earth’s atmosphere. In order to match the energy range mentioned above, the camera must be able to trigger events within a few tens of nanoseconds with high detection efficiency. This is obtained by combining silicon photo-multiplier sensors and suitable front-end electronics. Due to the characteristic imprint of the Cherenkov image that is a function of the shower core distance, the signal dynamic range of the pixels and consequently of the front-end electronics must span three orders of magnitude (1:1000 photo-electrons). These and many other features of the ASTRI SST-2M prototype camera will be reported in this contribution together with a complete overview of the mechanical and thermodynamic camera system.