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Featured researches published by P. Azzarello.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

A Large Area Detector proposed for the Large Observatory for X-ray Timing (LOFT)

S. Zane; D. Walton; T. Kennedy; M. Feroci; J. W. den Herder; M. Ahangarianabhari; A. Argan; P. Azzarello; G. Baldazzi; Didier Barret; Giuseppe Bertuccio; P. Bodin; E. Bozzo; Franck Cadoux; Philippe Cais; R. Campana; J. Coker; A. Cros; E. Del Monte; Alessandra De Rosa; S. Di Cosimo; I. Donnarumma; Yannick Favre; Charlotte Feldman; George W. Fraser; Fabio Fuschino; M. Grassi; M. Hailey; R. Hudec; Claudio Labanti

The Large Observatory for X-ray Timing (LOFT) is one of the four candidate ESA M3 missions considered for launch in the 2022 timeframe. It is specifically designed to perform fast X-ray timing and probe the status of the matter near black holes and neutron stars. The LOFT scientific payload is composed of a Large Area Detector (LAD) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a 10 m2-class pointed instrument with 20 times the collecting area of the best past timing missions (such as RXTE) over the 2-30 keV range, which holds the capability to revolutionize studies of X-ray variability down to the millisecond time scales. Its ground-breaking characteristic is a low mass per unit surface, enabling an effective area of ~10 m2 (@10 keV) at a reasonable weight. The development of such large but light experiment, with low mass and power per unit area, is now made possible by the recent advancements in the field of large-area silicon detectors - able to time tag an X-ray photon with an accuracy <10 μs and an energy resolution of ~260 eV at 6 keV - and capillary-plate X-ray collimators. In this paper, we will summarize the characteristics of the LAD instrument and give an overview of its capabilities.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The LOFT wide field monitor

Soren Brandt; M. Hernanz; Luis Alvarez; P. Azzarello; Didier Barret; E. Bozzo; Carl Budtz-Jørgensen; R. Campana; E. Del Monte; I. Donnarumma; Y. Evangalista; M. Feroci; J. L. Galvez Sanchez; Diego Gotz; F. Hansen; J. W. den Herder; R. Hudec; J. Huovelin; D. Karelin; S. Korpela; Niels Lund; P. Orleański; M. Pohl; A. Rashevski; A. Santangelo; S. Schanne; C. Schmid; Slawomir Suchy; C. Tenzer; A. Vacchi

LOFT (Large Observatory For x-ray Timing) is one of the four missions selected in 2011 for assessment study for the ESA M3 mission in the Cosmic Vision program, expected to be launched in 2024. The LOFT mission will carry two instruments with their prime sensitivity in the 2-30 keV range: a 10 m2 class large area detector (LAD) with a <1° collimated field of view and a wide field monitor (WFM) instrument based on the coded mask principle, providing coverage of more than 1/3 of the sky. The LAD will provide an effective area ~20 times larger than any previous mission and will by timing studies be able to address fundamental questions about strong gravity in the vicinity of black holes and the equation of state of nuclear matter in neutron stars. The prime goal of the WFM will be to detect transient sources to be observed by the LAD. However, with its wide field of view and good energy resolution of <300 eV, the WFM will be an excellent monitoring instrument to study long term variability of many classes of X-ray sources. The sensitivity of the WFM will be 2.1 mCrab in a one day observation, and 270 mCrab in 3s in observations of in the crowded field of the Galactic Center. The high duty cycle of the instrument will make it an ideal detector of fast transient phenomena, like X-ray bursters, soft gamma repeaters, terrestrial gamma flashes, and not least provide unique capabilities in the study of gamma ray bursts. A dedicated burst alert system will enable the distribution to the community of ~100 gamma ray burst positions per year with a ~1 arcmin location accuracy within 30 s of the burst. This paper provides an overview of the design, configuration, and capabilities of the LOFT WFM instrument.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The large area detector of LOFT: the Large Observatory for X-ray Timing

S. Zane; D. J. Walton; T. Kennedy; M. Feroci; J. W. den Herder; M. Ahangarianabhari; A. Argan; P. Azzarello; G. Baldazzi; Marco Barbera; Didier Barret; Giuseppe Bertuccio; P. Bodin; E. Bozzo; L. Bradley; F. Cadoux; Philippe Cais; R. Campana; J. Coker; A. Cros; E. Del Monte; A. De Rosa; S. Di Cosimo; I. Donnarumma; Y. Favre; Charlotte Feldman; George W. Fraser; Fabio Fuschino; M. Grassi; M. Hailey

LOFT (Large Observatory for X-ray Timing) is one of the five candidates that were considered by ESA as an M3 mission (with launch in 2022-2024) and has been studied during an extensive assessment phase. It is specifically designed to perform fast X-ray timing and probe the status of the matter near black holes and neutron stars. Its pointed instrument is the Large Area Detector (LAD), a 10 m2-class instrument operating in the 2-30keV range, which holds the capability to revolutionise studies of variability from X-ray sources on the millisecond time scales. The LAD instrument has now completed the assessment phase but was not down-selected for launch. However, during the assessment, most of the trade-offs have been closed leading to a robust and well documented design that will be reproposed in future ESA calls. In this talk, we will summarize the characteristics of the LAD design and give an overview of the expectations for the instrument capabilities.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013

A setup for soft proton irradiation of X-ray detectors for future astronomical space missions

S. Diebold; P. Azzarello; Ettore Del Monte; M. Feroci; J. Jochum; E. Kendziorra; E. Perinati; A. Rachevski; A. Santangelo; Christoph Tenzer; A. Vacchi; G. Zampa; N. Zampa

Abstract Protons that are trapped in the Earths magnetic field are one of the main threats to astronomical X-ray observatories. Soft protons, in the range from tens of keV up to a few MeV, impinging on silicon X-ray detectors can lead to a significant degradation of the detector performance. Especially in low earth orbits an enhancement of the soft proton flux has been found. A setup to irradiate detectors with soft protons has been constructed at the Van-de-Graaff accelerator of the Physikalisches Institut of the University of Tubingen. Key advantages are a high flux uniformity over a large area, to enable irradiations of large detectors, and a monitoring system for the applied fluence, the beam uniformity, and the spectrum, that allows testing of detector prototypes in early development phases, when readout electronics are not yet available. Two irradiation campaigns have been performed so far with this setup. The irradiated detectors are silicon drift detectors, designated for the use on-board the LOFT space mission. This paper gives a description of the experimental setup and the associated monitoring system.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2003

A study of the dimensional stability of the AMS silicon tracker

Willemina Johanna Burger; E. Perrin; J. Alcaraz; P. Azzarello; Ezio Babucci; R. Battiston; M. Bourquin; P. Extermann; A. Hasan; H. Hofer; R. Ionica; P. Levtchenko; K. Lübelsmeyer; W. Lustermann; M. Pauluzzi; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; V. Shoutko; R. Siedling; J. Ulbricht; J. Vandenhirtz; G. Viertel; W. Wallraff; Davide Vite

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) is designed as an independent module for installation on the International Space Station (ISS) for an operational period of 3 years. The AMS is the first cosmic ray spectrometer equipped with a large area silicon tracker . A preliminary version of the detector was flown on the NASA space shuttle Discovery during June 2–12, 1998. Results for the dimensional stability of the silicon tracker planes based on the flight data, and the metrology data recorded before and after the flight, are presented.


Chinese Physics C | 2016

Design of the readout electronics for the DAMPE Silicon Tracker detector

F. H. Zhang; Wenxi Peng; Ke Gong; D. Wu; Yi-Fan Dong; Rui Qiao; Ruirui Fan; Jinzhou Wang; H. W. Wang; Xin Wu; Daniel La Marra; P. Azzarello; Valentina Gallo; G. Ambrosi; Andrea Nardinocchi

The Silicon Tracker (STK) is a detector of the DAMPE satellite to measure the incidence direction of high energy cosmic ray. It consists of 6 X-Y double layers of silicon micro-strip detectors with 73,728 readout channels. Its a great challenge to readout the channels and process the huge volume of data in the critical space environment. 1152 Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASIC) and 384 ADCs are adopted to readout the detector channels. The 192 Tracker Front-end Hybrid (TFH) modules and 8 identical Tracker Readout Board (TRB) modules are designed to control and digitalize the front signals. In this paper, the design of the readout electronics for STK and its performance will be presented in detail.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2010

First PET imaging results with continuous LYSO crystals and monolithic, 64-pixel SiPM matrices

G. Llosa; J. Barrio; J. Cabello; C. Lacasta; M. Rafecas; P. Barrillon; Sylvie Bondil-Blin; Christophe De La Taille; C. Piemonte; G. Ambrosi; P. Azzarello; Maria Giuseppina Bisogni; Alberto Del Guerra

The University of Pisa and INFN Pisa are developing a prototype of a small animal PET tomograph employing continuous LYSO crystals and silicon photom ultiplier (SiPM) matrices as photodetectors. The Center for Scientific and Technological Research (FBK-irst) has developed monolithic, 64 pixel SiPM matrices for their use in the PET scanner. The IFIC-Valencia collaborates in the characterization of the first detector heads, and in the construction of a first prototype for proof of concept. The detector heads are composed of continuous 12 mm × 12 mm × 5 mm LYSO crystals coupled to the matrices. The characterization of the detectors has been completed, and a first test prototype consisting of two rotating heads has been developed, assessing the feasibility of operating the system.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The design of the wide field monitor for the LOFT mission

Soren Brandt; M. Hernanz; Laura Alvarez; A. Argan; B. Artigues; P. Azzarello; Didier Barret; E. Bozzo; Carl Budtz-Jørgensen; R. Campana; A. Cros; E. Del Monte; I. Donnarumma; M. Feroci; J. L. Galvez Sanchez; Diego Gotz; F. K. Hansen; J. W. den Herder; R. Hudec; J. Huovelin; D. Karelin; S. Korpela; Niels Lund; M. Michalska; P. E. H. Olsen; P. Orleański; S. Pedersen; M. Pohl; A. Rachevski; A. Santangelo

LOFT (Large Observatory For x-ray Timing) is one of the ESA M3 missions selected within the Cosmic Vision program in 2011 to carry out an assessment phase study and compete for a launch opportunity in 2022-2024. The phase-A studies of all M3 missions were completed at the end of 2013. LOFT is designed to carry on-board two instruments with sensitivity in the 2-50 keV range: a 10 m2 class Large Area Detector (LAD) with a <1° collimated FoV and a wide field monitor (WFM) making use of coded masks and providing an instantaneous coverage of more than 1/3 of the sky. The prime goal of the WFM will be to detect transient sources to be observed by the LAD. However, thanks to its unique combination of a wide field of view (FoV) and energy resolution (better than 500 eV), the WFM will be also an excellent monitoring instrument to study the long term variability of many classes of X-ray sources. The WFM consists of 10 independent and identical coded mask cameras arranged in 5 pairs to provide the desired sky coverage. We provide here an overview of the instrument design, configuration, and capabilities of the LOFT WFM. The compact and modular design of the WFM could easily make the instrument concept adaptable for other missions.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2018

Internal alignment and position resolution of the silicon tracker of DAMPE determined with orbit data

A. Tykhonov; G. Ambrosi; R. Asfandiyarov; P. Azzarello; P. Bernardini; B. Bertucci; A. Bolognini; F. Cadoux; A. D’Amone; A. De Benedittis; I. De Mitri; M. Di Santo; Yuhui Dong; M. Duranti; D. D’Urso; R.R. Fan; P. Fusco; Valentina Gallo; M. Gao; F. Gargano; S. Garrappa; Keyun Gong; M. Ionica; D. La Marra; Shi-Jun Lei; X. X. Li; F. Loparco; G. Marsella; M. N. Mazziotta; W.X. Peng

Abstract The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is a space-borne particle detector designed to probe electrons and gamma-rays in the few GeV to 10 TeV energy range, as well as cosmic-ray proton and nuclei components between 10 GeV and 100 TeV. The silicon–tungsten tracker–converter is a crucial component of DAMPE. It allows the direction of incoming photons converting into electron–positron pairs to be estimated, and the trajectory and charge (Z) of cosmic-ray particles to be identified. It consists of 768 silicon micro-strip sensors assembled in 6 double layers with a total active area of 6.6 m 2 . Silicon planes are interleaved with three layers of tungsten plates, resulting in about one radiation length of material in the tracker. Internal alignment parameters of the tracker have been determined on orbit, with non-showering protons and helium nuclei. We describe the alignment procedure and present the position resolution and alignment stability measurements.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Experimental verification of the HERD prototype at CERN SPS

Yongwei Dong; Zheng Quan; Junjing Wang; Ming Xu; Sebastiano Albergo; Filippo Ambroglini; G. Ambrosi; P. Azzarello; Yonglin Bai; Tianwei Bao; L. Baldini; R. Battiston; Paolo Bernardini; Zhen Chen; Raffaello D'Alessandro; M. Duranti; Domenico D'Urso; P. Fusco; Jiarui Gao; Xiaohui Gao; F. Gargano; N. Giglietto; Bingliang Hu; Ran Li; Yong Li; Xin Liu; F. Loparco; Junguang Lu; G. Marsella; Mario Nicola Mazziotta

The High Energy cosmic-Radiation Detection (HERD) facility is one of several space astronomy payloads of the cosmic light house program onboard Chinas Space Station, which is planned for operation starting around 2020 for about 10 years. Beam test with a HERD prototype, to verify the HERD specifications and the reading out method of wavelength shifting fiber and image intensified CCD, was taken at CERN SPS in November, 2015. The prototype is composed of an array of 5*5*10 LYSO crystals, which is 1/40th of the scale of HERD calorimeter. Experimental results on the performances of the calorimeter are discussed.

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G. Ambrosi

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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R. Battiston

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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M. Ionica

University of Perugia

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E. Bozzo

University of Geneva

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G. Zampa

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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