Salvo Buttaccio
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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
Jan Wagner; Alan L. Roy; T. P. Krichbaum; W. Alef; A. Bansod; Alessandra Bertarini; R. Güsten; D. A. Graham; Jeffrey A. Hodgson; R. Märtens; K. M. Menten; Dirk Muders; Helge Rottmann; G. Tuccari; A. Weiss; G. Wieching; Michael Wunderlich; J. A. Zensus; Juan Pablo Araneda; Oriel Arriagada; M. Cantzler; C. Duran; F. M. Montenegro-Montes; R. Olivares; Patricio Caro; Per Bergman; John Conway; Rüdiger Haas; Jan M. Johansson; Michael Lindqvist
Aims. We report about a 230 GHz very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) fringe finder observation of blazar 3C 279 with the APEX telescope in Chile, the phased submillimeter array (SMA), and the SMT of the Arizona Radio Observatory (ARO). Methods. We installed VLBI equipment and measured the APEX station position to 1 cm accuracy (1σ). We then observed 3C 279 on 2012 May 7 in a 5 h 230 GHz VLBI track with baseline lengths of 2800 Mλ to 7200 Mλ and a finest fringe spacing of 28.6 μas. Results. Fringes were detected on all baselines with signal-to-noise ratios of 12 to 55 in 420 s. The correlated flux density on the longest baseline was ∼0.3 Jy beam−1, out of a total flux density of 19.8 Jy. Visibility data suggest an emission region .38 μas in size, and at least two components, possibly polarized. We find a lower limit of the brightness temperature of the inner jet region of about 1010 K. Lastly, we find an upper limit of 20% on the linear polarization fraction at a fringe spacing of ∼38 μas. Conclusions. With APEX the angular resolution of 230 GHz VLBI improves to 28.6 μas. This allows one to resolve the last-photon ring around the Galactic Center black hole event horizon, expected to be 40 μas in diameter, and probe radio jet launching at unprecedented resolution, down to a few gravitational radii in galaxies like M 87. To probe the structure in the inner parsecs of 3C 279 in detail, follow-up observations with APEX and five other mm-VLBI stations have been conducted (March 2013) and are being analyzed.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Elise Egron; A. Pellizzoni; M. Giroletti; S. Righini; M. Stagni; A. Orlati; Carlo Migoni; A. Melis; Raimondo Concu; L. Barbas; Salvo Buttaccio; P. Cassaro; P. de Vicente; Marcin P. Gawronski; Michael Lindqvist; Giuseppe Maccaferri; C. Stanghellini; P. Wolak; Jun Yang; A. Navarrini; S. Loru; M. Pilia; Matteo Bachetti; M.N. Iacolina; M. Buttu; S. Corbel; J. Rodriguez; S. Markoff; J. Wilms; Katja Pottschmidt
In September 2016, the microquasar Cygnus X-3 underwent a giant radio flare, which was monitored for 6 days with the Medicina Radio Astronomical Station and the Sardinia Radio Telescope. Long observations were performed in order to follow the evolution of the flare on a hourly scale, covering six frequency ranges from 1.5 GHz to 25.6 GHz. The radio emission reached a maximum of 13.2 ± 0.7 Jy at 7.2 GHz and 10 ± 1 Jy at 18.6 GHz. Rapid flux variations were observed at high radio frequencies at the peak of the flare, together with rapid evolution of the spectral index: α steepened from 0.3 to 0.6 (with S
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Gino Tuccari; Giovanni Comoretto; A. Melis; Salvo Buttaccio
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
S. V. Pilipenko; Y. Y. Kovalev; A. S. Andrianov; U. Bach; Salvo Buttaccio; P. Cassaro; Giuseppe Cimo; Philip G. Edwards; Marcin P. Gawronski; L Gurvits; T. Hovatta; David L. Jauncey; Michael D. Johnson; Yu. A. Kovalev; Alexander Kutkin; M. M. Lisakov; A. E. Melnikov; A. Orlati; A. G. Rudnitskiy; K. V. Sokolovsky; C. Stanghellini; P. de Vicente; P. A. Voitsik; P. Wolak; G. V. Zhekanis
International Astronomical Union Colloquium | 1997
Stelio Montebugnoli; Claudio Bortolotti; Salvo Buttaccio; Alessandro Cattani; Andrea Maccaferri; Giuseppe Maccaferri; Cristiano Miani; Alessandro Orfei; Mauro Roma; Gino Tuccari; Nicola D. Amico; Gavril Grueff
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Archive | 2002
Gino Tuccari; Igor Molotov; Salvo Buttaccio; A. J. Kus; Xiao-Yin Hong; X.-Y. Liu
Proceedings of Science, 11th European VLBI Network Symposium & Users Meeting | 2013
W. Alef; Gino Tuccari; Salvo Buttaccio; Michael Wunderlich; D. A. Graham; Alessandra Bertarini; Alan L. Roy; Jan Wagner; G. Comoretto; Michael Lindqvist; Simon Casey
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Proceedings of 12th European VLBI Network Symposium and Users Meeting — PoS(EVN 2014) | 2015
Gino Tuccari; W. Alef; Salvo Buttaccio; Vincenza Tornatore; Michael Wunderlich
within 5 hours. This is the first time that such fast variations are observed, giving support to the evolution from optically thick to optically thin plasmons in expansion moving outward from the core. Based on the Italian network (Noto, Medicina and SRT) and extended to the European antennas (Torun, Yebes, Onsala), VLBI observations were triggered at 22 GHz on five different occasions, four times prior to the giant flare, and once during its decay phase. Flux variations of 2-hour duration were recorded during the first session. They correspond to a mini-flare that occurred close to the core ten days before the onset of the giant flare. From the latest VLBI observation we infer that four days after the flare peak the jet emission was extended over 30 mas.
Archive | 2009
Gino Tuccari; Salvo Buttaccio; Gaetano Nicotra; W. Alef; D. A. Graham; Alan L. Roy; Alessandra Bertarini; Alexander Neidhardt; Reinhard Zeitlhoefler
The Digital Base Band Converter project developed in the last decade produced a general architecture and a class of boards, firmware and software, giving the possibility to build a general purpose back-end system for VLBI or single-dish observational activities. Such approach suggests the realization of a digital radio system, i.e. a receiver with conversion not realized with analogue techniques, maintaining only amplification stages in the analogue domain. This solution can be applied until a maximum around 16 GHz, the present limit for the instantaneous input band in the latest version of the DBBC project, while in the millimeter frequency range this maximum limit of 0.5-2 GHz of the previous versions allows the intermediate frequency to be processed in the digital domain. A description of the elements developed in the DBBC project is presented, with their use in different environments. The architecture is composed of a PC controlled mainframe, and of different modules that can be combined in a very flexible way in order to realize different instruments. The instrument can be expanded or retrofitted to meet increasing observational demands. Available modules include ADC converters, processing boards, physical interfaces (VSI and 10G Ethernet). Several applications have already been implemented and used in radioastronomic observations: a DDC (Direct Digital Conversion) for VLBI observations, a Polyphase Digital Filter Bank, and a Multiband Scansion Spectrometer. Other applications are currently studied for additional functionalities like a spectropolarimeter, a linear-to-circular polarization converter, a RFI-mitigation tool, and a phase-reference holographic tool-kit.
Archive | 2005
Igor Molotov; Alexander A. Konovalenko; Gino Tuccari; Vladimir Agapov; Alexander Antipenko; Yu. N. Gorshenkov; A. E. Volvach; Xingxun Liu; Leonid Nikolaevich Litvinenko; Igor S. Falkovich; Oleg Fedorov; S. A. Zasukha; Vadim Abrossimov; Alexander Pushkarev; M. B. Nechaeva; Aleksandr Dementiev; Nikolay Dugin; V. V. Titenko; Ivar Shmeld; Vladimir Jazykov; Salvo Buttaccio; C. Nicotra; A. M. Tsyukh; V. N. Nesteruk; I. Puchinin
The high brightness temperatures,