Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where P. Bruno is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by P. Bruno.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

Discovery of a bipolar and highly variable mass outflow from the symbiotic binary StHα 190

U. Munari; T. Tomov; B. F. Yudin; P. M. Marrese; T. Zwitter; R. Gratton; G. Bonanno; P. Bruno; A. Calí; Riccardo U. Claudi; Rosario Cosentino; S. Desidera; G. Farisato; G. Martorana; G. Marino; M. Rebeschini; Salvatore Scuderi; M. C. Timpanaro

A highly and rapidly variable bipolar mass outflow from StHa 190 has been discovered, the first time in a yellow symbiotic star. Permitted emission lines are flanked by symmetrical jet features and multi-component P-Cyg profiles, with velocities up to 300 km/sec. Given the high orbital inclination of the binary, if the jets leave the system nearly perpendicular to the orbital plane, the de-projected velocity equals or exceeds the escape velocity (1000 km/sec). StHa190 looks quite peculiar in many other respects: the hot component is an O-type sub-dwarf without an accretion disk or a veiling nebular continuum and the cool component is a G7 III star rotating at a spectacular 105 km/sec unseen by a large margin in field G giants.A highly and rapidly variable bipolar mass outflow from StH 190 has been discovered, the rst time in a yellow symbiotic star. Permitted emission lines are flanked by symmetrical jet features and multi-component P-Cyg proles, with velocities up to 300 km s 1 . Given the high orbital inclination of the binary, if the jets leave the system nearly perpendicular to the orbital plane, the de-projected velocity equals or exceeds the escape velocity (1000 km s 1 ). StH 190 looks quite peculiar in many other respects: the hot component is an O-type sub-dwarf without an accretion disk or a veiling nebular continuum and the cool component is a G7 III star rotating at a spectacular 105 km s 1 , unseen by a large margin in eld G giants.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

GIANO-TNG spectroscopy of red supergiants in the young star cluster RSGC2

L. Origlia; E. Oliva; Roberto Maiolino; A. Mucciarelli; C. Baffa; Valdemaro Biliotti; P. Bruno; G. Falcini; V. Gavriousev; F. Ghinassi; E. Giani; Mª Victoria Fonseca González; F. Leone; Marcello Lodi; F. Massi; P. Montegriffo; I. Mochi; M. Pedani; E. Rossetti; S. Scuderi; M. Sozzi; A. Tozzi

Aims. The inner disk of the Galaxy has a number of young star clusters dominated by red supergiants that are heavily obscured by dust extinction and observable only at infrared wavelengths. These clusters are important tracers of the recent star formation and chemical enrichment history in the inner Galaxy. Methods. During the technical commissioning and as a first science verification of the GIANO spectrograph at the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo, we secured high-resolution (R � 50 000) near-infrared spectra of three red supergiants in the young Scutum cluster RSGC2. Results. Taking advantage of the full YJHK spectral coverage of GIANO in a single exposure, we were able to identify several tens of atomic and molecular lines suitable for chemical abundance determinations. By means of spectral synthesis and line equivalent width measurements, we obtained abundances of Fe and other iron-peak elements such as V, Cr, Ni, of alpha (O, Mg, Si, Ca and Ti) and other light elements (C, N, Na, Al, K, Sc), and of some s-process elements (Y, Sr). We found iron abundances between half and one third solar and solar-scaled [X/Fe] abundance patterns of iron-peak, alpha and most of the light elements, consistent with a thin-disk chemistry. We found a depletion of [C/Fe] and enhancement of [N/Fe], consistent with CN burning, and low 12 C/ 13 C abundance ratios (between 9 and 11), requiring extra-mixing processes in the stellar interiors during the post-main-sequence evolution. Finally, we found a slight [Sr/Fe] enhancement and a slight [Y/Fe] depletion (by a factor of ≤2), with respect to solar.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The GIANO spectrometer: towards its first light at the TNG

E. Oliva; L. Origlia; R. Maiolino; C. Baffa; Valdemaro Biliotti; P. Bruno; G. Falcini; V. Gavriousev; F. Ghinassi; E. Giani; Mª Victoria Fonseca González; F. Leone; Marcello Lodi; F. Massi; Iacopo Mochi; P. Montegriffo; M. Pedani; E. Rossetti; S. Scuderi; M. Sozzi; A. Tozzi

GIANO is a high resolution (R50,000) IR spectrograph which provides a quasi-complete coverage of the 0.95- 2.5μm wavelengths range in a single exposure. The instrument was integrated and tested in Arcetri-INAF (Florence, Italy) and will be commisioned at the 3.58m TNG Italian telescope in La Palma. The major scientific goals include the search for rocky planets with habitable conditions around low-mass stars, quantitative spectroscopy of brown dwarfs, accurate chemical abundances of high metallicity stars and stellar clusters. This presentation describes the status of the instrument and presents the first results obtained in laboratory during the acceptance tests.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

The GIANO-TNG spectrometer

E. Oliva; L. Origlia; C. Baffa; C. Biliotti; P. Bruno; F. D'Amato; C. Del Vecchio; G. Falcini; S. Gennari; F. Ghinassi; E. Giani; M. Gonzalez; F. Leone; Marco Lolli; M. Lodi; R. Maiolino; Filippo Mannucci; G. Marcucci; I. Mochi; P. Montegriffo; E. Rossetti; S. Scuderi; M. Sozzi

GIANO is an infrared (0.9-2.5 μm cross-dispersed echelle spectrometer designed to achieve high resolution, high throughput, wide band coverage and very high stability for accurate radial velocity measurements. It also includes polarimetric capabilities and a low resolution mode with RS ~ 400 and complete 0.75-2.5 μm coverage. This makes it a very versatile, common user instrument which will be permanently mounted and available on the Nasmyth-B foci of the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo (TNG) located at Roque de Los Muchachos Observatory (ORM), La Palma, Spain. The project is fast-track and relies on well known, relatively standard technologies. It has been recognized as one of the top priority instrumental projects of INAF (the Italian National Institute of Astronomy) and received its first financing for the phase-A study in October 2003. Integration in the laboratory is planned to start before the end of 2006, commissioning at the telescope is foreseen within 2007 and scientific operations in 2008. One of the most important scientific goals is the search for rocky planets with habitable conditions around low-mass stars. If completed on time, GIANO will be the first and only IR instrument operating worldwide providing the combination of efficiency, spectral resolution, wavelength coverage and stability necessary for this type of research. With its unique combination of high and low resolution modes, GIANO will also be a very flexible common-user instrument ideal e.g. for quantitative spectroscopy of brown dwarfs, stars and stellar clusters as well as for the determination of the spectral energy distribution of faint/red objects such as high redshift galaxies. The expected limiting magnitudes are such that GIANO will be able to deliver good quality HR spectra of any 2MASS object and LR spectra of any object detected in the UKIDSS large area survey.


Solid State Sensor Arrays and CCD Cameras | 1996

CCD cameras for the Italian national telescope Galileo

Fabio Bortoletto; Carlotta Bonoli; Maurizio D'Alessandro; D. Fantinel; Giancarlo Farisato; G. Bonanno; P. Bruno; Rosario Cosentino; G. Bregoli; Maurizio Comari

In the last years, the Charge Coupled Device (CCD) detectors have had a great development: 2048 X 2048 pixel formats are routinely produced by silicon foundries with good electro- optical characteristics. Scientific CCDs now, not only offer the ability to be read from more than one output, but they can also be buttable to form mosaics in order to cover a larger field of view, requirement posed by the current telescope technology. The Italian National Telescope GALILEO (TNG) will support a large set of visual and near IR detectors dedicated to scientific measurements at the focal plane. Also tracking systems and Shack-Hartmann wavefront analyzers will be based on CCD technology. Due to the number of camera systems to be routinely operated, the possibility to have uniformed interaction and configuration of systems is emerged as an important requirement for this crucial part of the telescope. In this paper the detector and instrument plan foreseen for the TNG telescope will be presented on the first part, while on the second we will present the CCD controller, now at the end of development. Here presented is a modular system based on digital signal processors and transputer modules. It is interfaced to host computers (PCs, workstations or VME crates) via optical fibers and a specially developed VME-VSB interface board.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

A GIANO-TNG high-resolution infrared spectrum of the airglow emission

E. Oliva; L. Origlia; Roberto Maiolino; C. Baffa; Valdemaro Biliotti; P. Bruno; G. Falcini; V. Gavriousev; F. Ghinassi; E. Giani; Mª Victoria Fonseca González; F. Leone; Marcello Lodi; F. Massi; P. Montegriffo; Iacopo Mochi; M. Pedani; E. Rossetti; S. Scuderi; M. Sozzi; A. Tozzi; E. Valenti

Aims. A flux-calibrated high-resolution spectrum of the airglow emission is a practical λ-calibration reference for astronomical spectral observations. It is also useful for constraining the molecular parameters of the OH molecule and the physical conditions in the upper mesosphere. Methods. We used the data collected during the first technical commissioning of the GIANO spectrograph at the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo (TNG). The high-resolution (R � 50 000) spectrum simultaneously covers the 0.95–2.4 μm wavelength range. Relative flux calibration is achieved by the simultaneous observation of a spectrophotometric standard star. Results. We derived a list of improved positions and intensities of OH infrared lines. The list includes Λ-split doublets, many of which are spectrally resolved. Compared with previous works, the new results correct errors in the wavelengths of the Q-branch transitions. The relative fluxes of OH lines from different vibrational bands show remarkable deviations from theoretical predictions: the Δv = 3, 4 lines are a factor of 2 and 4 brighter than expected. We also found evidence of a significant fraction (1–4%) of OH molecules with a non-thermal population of high-J levels. Finally, we list wavelengths and fluxes of 153 lines not attributable to OH. Most of these can be associated with O2, while 37 lines in the H band are not identified. The O2 and unidentified lines in the H band account for � 5% of the total airglow flux in this band.


Optical Design and Engineering IV | 2011

Optical Design and Test of the BIGRE Based IFS of SPHERE

R. U. Claudi; E. Giro; U. Anselmi; D. Mesa; J. Antichi; R. Gratton; S. Desidera; V. De Caprio; L. Lessio; S. Scuderi; P. Bruno; D. Fantinel; Bernardo Salasnich; E. Cascone; J.-L. Beuzit; Kjetil Dohlen; F. Wildi; Pascal Puget; M. Kasper; Norbert Hubin

During the last months IFS, is the Integral Field Spectrograph for SPHERE, devoted to the search of exoplanets has been integrated in the clean room of Padova Observatory. The design of IFS is based on a new concept of double microlens array sampling the focal plane. This device named BIGRE consists of a system made of two microlens arrays with different focal lengths and thickness equal to the sum of them and precisely aligned each other. Moreover a mask has been deposited on the first array to produce a field stop for each lenslet, and a second mask is located on the intermediate pupil of the IFS to provide an aperture stop. After characterization of a previous prototype of BIGRE in the visible range, now the first measurements of the performances of the device in the IR range have been obtained on the instrument that will be mounted at the VLT telescope. These tests confirmed that specifications and properties of the prototype are met by state of the art on optics microlens manufacturing.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

The integral field spectrograph of SPHERE: the planet finder for VLT

R. U. Claudi; M. Turatto; J. Antichi; R. Gratton; S. Scuderi; E. Cascone; D. Mesa; S. Desidera; Andrea Baruffolo; Alessandro Berton; Paolo Bagnara; E. Giro; P. Bruno; D. Fantinel; J.-L. Beuzit; P. Puget; Kjetil Dohlen

SPHERE is an instrument designed and built by a consortium of French, German, Italian, Swiss and Dutch institutes in collaboration with ESO. The project is currently in its Phase B. The main goal of SPHERE is to gain at least one order of magnitude with respect to the present VLT AO facility (NACO) in the direct detection of faint objects very close to a bright star, especially giant extrasolar planets. Apart from a high Strehl ratio, the instrument will be designed to reduce the scattered light of the central bright star and subtract the residual speckle halo. Sophisticated post-AO capabilities are needed to provide maximum detectivity and possibly physical data on the putative planets. The Integral Field Spectrograph (IFS), one of the three scientific channels foreseen in the SPHERE design, is a very low resolution spectrograph (R~20) which works in the near IR (0.95-1.35 μm), an ideal wavelength range for the ground based detection of planetary features. Its goal is to suppress speckle to a contrast of 107, with a goal of 108, and at the same time provide spectral information in a field of view of about 1.5 × 1.5 arcsecs2 in proximity of the target star. In this paper we describe the overall IFS design concept.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

Dynamical models to explain observations with SPHERE in planetary systems with double debris belts

C. Lazzoni; S. Desidera; Francesco Marzari; A. Boccaletti; M. Langlois; D. Mesa; R. Gratton; Q. Kral; N. Pawellek; J. Olofsson; M. Bonnefoy; G. Chauvin; A.-M. Lagrange; A. Vigan; E. Sissa; J. Antichi; H. Avenhaus; Andrea Baruffolo; J.-L. Baudino; A. Bazzon; J.-L. Beuzit; Beth A. Biller; Mariangela Bonavita; Wolfgang Brandner; P. Bruno; Esther Buenzli; F. Cantalloube; E. Cascone; A. Cheetham; R. U. Claudi

Context. A large number of systems harboring a debris disk show evidence for a double belt architecture. One hypothesis for explaining the gap between the debris belts in these disks is the presence of one or more planets dynamically carving it. For this reason these disks represent prime targets for searching planets using direct imaging instruments, like the Spectro-Polarimetric High-constrast Exoplanet Research (SPHERE) at the Very Large Telescope. Aim. The goal of this work is to investigate this scenario in systems harboring debris disks divided into two components, placed, respectively, in the inner and outer parts of the system. All the targets in the sample were observed with the SPHERE instrument, which performs high-contrast direct imaging, during the SHINE guaranteed time observations. Positions of the inner and outer belts were estimated by spectral energy distribution fitting of the infrared excesses or, when available, from resolved images of the disk. Very few planets have been observed so far in debris disks gaps and we intended to test if such non-detections depend on the observational limits of the present instruments. This aim is achieved by deriving theoretical predictions of masses, eccentricities, and semi-major axes of planets able to open the observed gaps and comparing such parameters with detection limits obtained with SPHERE. Methods. The relation between the gap and the planet is due to the chaotic zone neighboring the orbit of the planet. The radial extent of this zone depends on the mass ratio between the planet and the star, on the semi-major axis, and on the eccentricity of the planet, and it can be estimated analytically. We first tested the different analytical predictions using a numerical tool for the detection of chaotic behavior and then selected the best formula for estimating a planet’s physical and dynamical properties required to open the observed gap. We then apply the formalism to the case of one single planet on a circular or eccentric orbit. We then consider multi-planetary systems: two and three equal-mass planets on circular orbits and two equal-mass planets on eccentric orbits in a packed configuration. As a final step, we compare each couple of values ( M p , a p ), derived from the dynamical analysis of single and multiple planetary models, with the detection limits obtained with SPHERE. Results. For one single planet on a circular orbit we obtain conclusive results that allow us to exclude such a hypothesis since in most cases this configuration requires massive planets which should have been detected by our observations. Unsatisfactory is also the case of one single planet on an eccentric orbit for which we obtained high masses and/or eccentricities which are still at odds with observations. Introducing multi planetary architectures is encouraging because for the case of three packed equal-mass planets on circular orbits we obtain quite low masses for the perturbing planets which would remain undetected by our SPHERE observations. The case of two equal-mass planets on eccentric orbits is also of interest since it suggests the possible presence of planets with masses lower than the detection limits and with moderate eccentricity. Our results show that the apparent lack of planets in gaps between double belts could be explained by the presence of a system of two or more planets possibly of low mass and on eccentric orbits whose sizes are below the present detection limits.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The SPHERE IFS at work

R. U. Claudi; E. Giro; M. Turatto; Andrea Baruffolo; P. Bruno; E. Cascone; V. DeCaprio; S. Desidera; Reinhold J. Dorn; D. Fantinel; Gert Finger; R. Gratton; L. Lessio; J.-L. Lizon; A.-L. Maire; D. Mesa; Bernardo Salasnich; S. Scuderi; A. Zurlo; Kjetil Dohlen; Jean-Luc Beuzit; David Mouillet; Pascal Puget; F. Wildi; Norbert Hubin; M. Kasper

SPHERE is an extrasolar planet imager whose goal is to detect giant extrasolar planets in the vicinity of bright stars and to characterize them through spectroscopic and polarimetric observations. It is a complete system with a core made of an extreme-Adaptive Optics (AO) turbulence correction, a pupil tracker and NIR and Visible coronagraph devices. At its back end, a differential dual imaging camera and an integral field spectrograph (IFS) work in the Near Infrared (NIR) (0.95 ≤λ≤2.32 μm) and a high resolution polarization camera covers the visible (0.6 ≤λ≤0.9 μm). The IFS is a low resolution spectrograph (R~50) operates in the near IR (0.95≤λ≤1.6 μm), an ideal wavelength range for the detection of planetary features, over a field of view of about 1.7 x 1.7 square arcsecs. Form spectra it is possible to reconstruct monochromatic images with high contrast (10-7) and high spatial resolution, well inside the star PSF. In this paper we describe the IFS, its calibration and the results of several performance which IFS underwent. Furthermore, using the IFS characteristics we give a forecast on the planetary detection rate.

Collaboration


Dive into the P. Bruno's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge