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Featured researches published by P. Vicini.


Astroparticle Physics | 2010

Measurement of the atmospheric muon flux with the NEMO Phase-1 detector

Sebastiano Aiello; Fabrizio Ameli; I. Amore; M. Anghinolfi; A. Anzalone; G.C. Barbarino; M. Battaglieri; M. Bazzotti; A. Bersani; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; M. Bonori; B. Bouhadef; M. Brunoldi; G. Cacopardo; A. Capone; L. Caponetto; G. Carminati; T. Chiarusi; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Cordelli; M. Costa; A. D’Amico; G. De Bonis; C. De Marzo; G. De Rosa; G. De Ruvo; R. De Vita

Abstract The NEMO Collaboration installed and operated an underwater detector including prototypes of the critical elements of a possible underwater km3 neutrino telescope: a four-floor tower (called Mini-Tower) and a Junction Box. The detector was developed to test some of the main systems of the km3 detector, including the data transmission, the power distribution, the timing calibration and the acoustic positioning systems as well as to verify the capabilities of a single tridimensional detection structure to reconstruct muon tracks. We present results of the analysis of the data collected with the NEMO Mini-Tower. The position of photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) is determined through the acoustic position system. Signals detected with PMTs are used to reconstruct the tracks of atmospheric muons. The angular distribution of atmospheric muons was measured and results compared to Monte Carlo simulations.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2008

The Data Acquisition and Transport Design for NEMO Phase 1

F. Ameli; S. Aiello; A. Aloisio; I. Amore; M. Anghinolfi; A. Anzalone; C. Avanzini; G.C. Barbarino; E. Barbarito; M. Battaglieri; M. Bazzotti; R. Bellotti; A. Bersani; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; M. Bonori; B. Bouhadef; G. Cacopardo; A. Capone; L. Caponetto; G. Carminati; B. Cassano; E. Castorina; A. Ceres; T. Chiarusi; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Cordelli; M. Costa

The NEMO collaboration proposes to build an underwater neutrino telescope located South-East off the Sicily coast. This paper describes the concepts underlying the communication link design going over the whole data acquisition and transport from the front-end electronics to the module sending data on-shore through a fiber optic link which relies on Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing. An on-shore board, plugged into a PC, extracts and distributes data both to first-level trigger and control systems. Underwater apparatus monitoring and controls are guaranteed by oceanographic instruments and dedicated sensors, whose data are packed and sent back to shore using the same optical link. The communication is fully bidirectional, allowing transmission of timing and control commands. The architecture described here provides a complete real-time data transport layer between the onshore laboratory and the underwater detector. During winter 2006 a first prototype of the apparatus has been deployed: calibration results from the currently working system are here reported.


Astroparticle Physics | 2015

Measurement of the atmospheric muon depth intensity relation with the NEMO Phase-2 tower

S. Aiello; F. Ameli; M. Anghinolfi; G.C. Barbarino; E. Barbarito; F. Barbato; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; Bachir Bouhadef; C. Bozza; G. Cacopardo; M. Calamai; C. Calì; A. Capone; F. Caruso; A. Ceres; T. Chiarusi; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Costa; G. Cuttone; C. D’Amato; A. D’Amico; G. De Bonis; V. De Luca; N. Deniskina; G. De Rosa; F. Di Capua; C. Distefano

Abstract The results of the analysis of the data collected with the NEMO Phase-2 tower, deployed at 3500xa0m depth about 80xa0km off-shore Capo Passero (Italy), are presented. Cerenkov photons detected with the photomultipliers tubes were used to reconstruct the tracks of atmospheric muons. Their zenith-angle distribution was measured and the results compared with Monte Carlo simulations. An evaluation of the systematic effects due to uncertainties on environmental and detector parameters is also included. The associated depth intensity relation was evaluated and compared with previous measurements and theoretical predictions. With the present analysis, the muon depth intensity relation has been measured up to 13xa0km of water equivalent.


Nuclear Physics | 1994

A high statistics lattice calculation of ƒB in the static limit on APE

Chris Allton; Vittorio Lubicz; G. Martinelli; G Salina; A. Vladikas; A. Bartoloni; C. Battista; S. Cabasino; N. Cabibbo; F. Marzano; P.S. Paolucci; J. Pech; F. Rapuano; R. Sarno; G.M. Todesco; M. Torelli; W. Tross; R Tripiccione; P. Vicini

We present a high statistics calculation of ƒB in the static limit. The results have been obtained by numerical simulation of quenched QCD, at β = 6.0 on a 183 × 32 lattice. We compare ƒB calculated by using the Wilson and the Clover quark actions. The decay constant is obtained by studying heavy-light correlation functions of different smeared operators, on a sample of 210 gauge field configurations. We find that cubic smearings of size Ls ⩽ 3 or Ls ⩾ 9 are bad projectors on the lightest pseudoscalar state. Combining the information coming from smearing Ls = 5 and Ls = 7, we have obtained ƒB = 370±40 MeV in the clover case and ƒB = 350±40±30 MeV in the Wilson case. Our results support a large value of the pseudoscalar decay constant in the static approximation.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2014

Status and first results of the NEMO Phase-2 tower

T. Chiarusi; S. Aiello; F. Ameli; M. Anghinolfi; G.C. Barbarino; E. Barbarito; F. Barbato; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; B. Bouhadef; C. Bozza; G. Cacopardo; M. Calamai; C. Calì; A. Capone; F. Caruso; A. Ceres; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Costa; G. Cuttone; C. D'Amato; V. D'Amato; A. D'Amico; G. Debonis; V. De Luca; N. Deniskina; G. De Rosa; C. Distefano

In March 2013, the NEMO Phase 2 tower has been successfully installed in the Capo Passero site, at a depth of 3500 m and 80 km off from the southern coast of Sicily. The unfurled tower is 450 m high; it is composed of 8 mechanical floors, for a total amount of 32 PMTs and various instruments for environmental measurements. The tower positioning is achieved by an acoustic system. The tower is continuously acquiring and transmitting all the measured signals to shore. Data reduction is completely performed in the Portopalo shore station by a dedicated computing facility connected to the persistent storage system at LNS, in Catania. Results from the last 9 months of acquisition will be presented. In particular, the analyzed optical rates, showing stable and low baseline values, are compatible with the contribution mainly of 40K light emission, with a small percentage of light bursts due to bioluminescence. These features reveal the optimal nature of the Capo Passero abyssal site to host a km3-sized Neutrino Telescope.


6th International Workshop on Very Large Volume Neutrino Telescopes, VLVnT 2013 | 2014

The trigger and data acquisition for the NEMO-Phase 2 tower

C. Pellegrino; F. Simeone; T. Chiarusi; S. Aiello; F. Ameli; M. Anghinolfi; G.C. Barbarino; E. Barbarito; F. Barbato; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; B. Bouhadef; C. Bozza; G. Cacopardo; M. Calamai; C. Calì; A. Capone; F. Caruso; A. Ceres; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Costa; G. Cuttone; C. D'Amato; V. D'Amato; A. D'Amico; G. Debonis; V. Deluca; N. Deniskina

In the framework of the Phase 2 of the NEMO neutrino telescope project, a tower with 32 optical modules is being operated since march 2013. A new scalable Trigger and Data Acquisition System (TriDAS) has been developed and extensively tested with the data from this tower. Adopting the all-data-to-shore concept, the NEMO TriDAS is optimized to deal with a continuous data-stream from off-shore to on-shore with a large bandwidth. The TriDAS consists of four computing layers: (i) data aggregation of isochronal hits from all optical modules; (ii) data filtering by means of concurrent trigger algorithms; (iii) composition of the filtered events into post-trigger files; (iv) persistent data storage. The TriDAS implementation is reported together with a review of dedicated on-line monitoring tools.


6th International Workshop on Very Large Volume Neutrino Telescopes, VLVnT 2013 | 2014

Long-term optical background measurements in the Capo Passero deep-sea site

M. G. Pellegriti; S. Aiello; F. Ameli; M. Anghinolfi; G.C. Barbarino; E. Barbarito; F. Barbato; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; B. Bouhadef; C. Bozza; G. Cacopardo; M. Calamai; C. Calì; A. Capone; F. Caruso; A. Ceres; Tommaso Chiarusi; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Costa; G. Cuttone; C. D'Amato; V. D'Amato; A. D'Amico; G. Debonis; V. De Luca; N. Deniskina; G. De Rosa

In March 2013, the Nemo Phase-2 tower has been successfully installed at 100 km off-shore Capo Passero (Italy) and 3500 m depth. This 8-floor tower hosts 32 10-inch PMTs. Results from optical background measurements are presented. In particular, the analyzed rates show stable and low baseline values, compatible with the contribution of 40K light emission, with a small percentage of light bursts due to bioluminescence. All these features are a confirmation of the stability and good optical nature of the site.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2006

The apeNEXT project

F. Belletti; François Bodin; Ph. Boucaud; N. Cabibbo; A. Lonardo; S. De Luca; M. Lukyanov; J. Micheli; L. Morin; O. Pène; Dirk Pleiter; F. Rapuano; D. Rossetti; Sebastiano Fabio Schifano; H. Simma; R. Tripiccione; P. Vicini

Numerical simulations in theoretical high-energy physics (Lattice QCD) require huge computing resources. Several generations of massively parallel computers optimised for these applications have been developed within the APE (array processor experiment) project. Large prototype systems of the latest generation, apeNEXT, are currently being assembled and tested. This contribution explains how the apeNEXT architecture is optimised for Lattice QCD, provides an overview of the hardware and software of apeNEXT, and describes its new features, like the SPMD programming model and the C compiler.


Nuclear Physics B - Proceedings Supplements | 2004

NEMO: Status of the Project

E. Migneco; S. Aiello; E. Amato; M. Ambriola; F. Ameli; G. Andronico; M. Anghinolfi; M. Battaglieri; R. Bellotti; A. Bersani; A. Boldrin; M. Bonori; F. Cafagna; A. Capone; L. Caponnetto; T. Chiarusi; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Cordelli; M. Costa; S. Cuneo; A. D'Amico; V. D'Amico; C. De Marzo; R. De Vita; C. Distefano; Alessandro Gabrielli; E. Gandolfi; A. Grimaldi


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2010

Procedures and results of the measurements on large area photomultipliers for the NEMO project

S. Aiello; E. Leonora; A. Aloisio; F. Ameli; I. Amore; M. Anghinolfi; A. Anzalone; G.C. Barbarino; E. Barbarito; M. Battaglieri; M. Bazzotti; R. Bellotti; A. Bersani; Nicolo' Beverini; S. Biagi; M. Bonori; B. Bouhdaef; G. Cacopardo; Claudio Calì; A. Capone; L. Caponetto; G. Carminati; B. Cassano; A. Ceres; T. Chiarusi; M. Circella; R. Cocimano; R. Coniglione; M. Cordelli; M. Costa

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A. Capone

Sapienza University of Rome

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R. Cocimano

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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M. Anghinolfi

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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F. Ameli

Sapienza University of Rome

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G. Cacopardo

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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S. Aiello

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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R. Coniglione

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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