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Dive into the research topics where Tommaso Occhipinti is active.

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Featured researches published by Tommaso Occhipinti.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Iqueye, a single photon-counting photometer applied to the ESO new technology telescope

Giampiero Naletto; Cesare Barbieri; Tommaso Occhipinti; Ivan Capraro; A. Di Paola; C. Facchinetti; Enrico Verroi; P. Zoccarato; G. Anzolin; S. Billotta; Pietro Bolli; G. Bonanno; Da Deppo; S. Fornasier; C. Germanà; E. Giro; S. Marchi; Filippo Messina; Claudio Pernechele; Fabrizio Tamburini; Mirco Zaccariotto; L. Zampieri

Context. A new extremely high speed photon-counting photometer, Iqueye, has been installed and tested at the New Technology Telescope, in La Silla. Aims. This instrument is the second prototype of a “quantum” photometer being developed for future Extremely Large Telescopes of 30–50 m aperture. Methods. Iqueye divides the telescope aperture into four portions, each feeding a single photon avalanche diode. The counts from the four channels are collected by a time-to-digital converter board, where each photon is appropriately time-tagged. Owing to a rubidium oscillator and a GPS receiver, an absolute rms timing accuracy better than 0.5 ns during one-hour observations is achieved. The system can sustain a count rate of up to 8 MHz uninterruptedly for an entire night of observation. Results. During five nights of observations, the system performed smoothly, and the observations of optical pulsar calibration targets provided excellent results.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2005

Astronomical applications of quantum optics for extremely large telescopes

Dainis Dravins; Cesare Barbieri; Robert A. E. Fosbury; Giampiero Naletto; Ricky Nilsson; Tommaso Occhipinti; Fabrizio Tamburini; Helena Uthas; L. Zampieri

Modern optics focuses on photonics and quantum optics, studying individual photons and statistics of photon streams. Those can be complex and carry information beyond that recorded by imaging, spectroscopy, polarimetry or interferometry. Since [almost] all astronomy is based upon the interpretation of subtleties in the light from astronomical sources, quantum optics has the potential of becoming another information channel from the Universe. The observability of quantum statistics increases rapidly with telescope size making photonic astronomy very timely in an era of very large telescopes.


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2005

QuantEYE, the Quantum Optics Instrument for OWL

Cesare Barbieri; V. Da Deppo; Mauro D'Onofrio; Dainis Dravins; S. Fornasier; Robert A. E. Fosbury; Giampiero Naletto; Ricky Nilsson; Tommaso Occhipinti; Fabrizio Tamburini; Helena Uthas; L. Zampieri

QuantEYE is designed to be the highest time-resolution instrument on ESO:s planned Overwhelmingly Large Telescope, devised to explore astrophysical variability on microsecond and nanosecond scales, down to the quantum-optical limit. Expected phenomena include instabilities of photongas bubbles in accretion flows, p-mode oscillations in neutron stars, and quantum-optical photon bunching in time. Precise timescales are both variable and unknown, and studies must be of photon-stream statistics, e.g., their power spectra or autocorrelations. Such functions increase with the square of the intensity, implying an enormously increased sensitivity at the largest telescopes. QuantEYE covers the optical, and its design involves an array of photon-counting avalanche-diode detectors, each viewing one segment of the OWL entrance pupil. QuantEYE will work already with a partially filled OWL main mirror, and also without [full] adaptive optics.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2009

AquEYE, a single photon counting photometer for astronomy

Cesare Barbieri; Giampiero Naletto; Tommaso Occhipinti; C. Facchinetti; Enrico Verroi; E. Giro; A. Di Paola; S. Billotta; P. Zoccarato; Pietro Bolli; Fabrizio Tamburini; G. Bonanno; Mauro D'Onofrio; S. Marchi; G. Anzolin; Ivan Capraro; Filippo Messina; Claudio Pernechele; Mirco Zaccariotto; L. Zampieri; V. Da Deppo; S. Fornasier; Fernando Pedichini

This paper describes the results obtained so far with AquEYE, a single photon counting, fixed aperture photometer for the Asiago 182 cm telescope. AquEYE has been conceived as a prototype of a truly ‘quantum’ photometer for future Extremely Large Telescopes of 30–50 m aperture. This prototype is characterized by four independent channels equipped with single photon avalanche diodes (SPADs) as detectors. The counts from the four channels are acquired by a TDC board which has a nominal 25 ps time tagging capability. Taking into account the 35 ps jitter in the SPAD itself, the overall precision of the time tags is of the order of 50 ps. The internal oscillator is locked to an external rubidium clock; a GPS pulse per second is collected by the TDC itself to obtain a UTC reference. The maximum photon count rate which the present system can sustain is 12 MHz.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2009

Characterization of detectors for the Italian Astronomical Quantum Photometer Project

S. Billotta; G. Bonanno; Salvatore di Mauro; M.C. Timpanaro; G. Condorelli; P. Giorgio Fallica; M. Mazzillo; D. Sanfilippo; Giuseppina Valvo; Luigi Cosentino; Paolo Finocchiaro; Alfio Pappalardo; Giampiero Naletto; Tommaso Occhipinti; Claudio Pernechele; Cesare Barbieri

In the framework of a national collaboration to bring Quantum Optics concepts to Astronomy, we are involved in finding suitable detectors for this novel application. At ‘INAF Osservatorio Astrofisico di Catania’ and ‘INFN – Laboratori Nazionali del Sud’ laboratories, measurements of electro-optical parameters, such as photon detection efficiency (PDE), linearity, dark counts and after pulsing probability, as well as of timing resolution, have been carried out. These measurements have been done on silicon detectors, such as single photon avalanche diode (SPAD) (both single element and array), and silicon photon multiplier (SiPM), operating in the photon counting regime.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

Aqueye optical observations of the Crab Nebula pulsar

C. Germanà; L. Zampieri; Cesare Barbieri; Giampiero Naletto; Andrej Čadež; M. Calvani; Mauro Barbieri; Ivan Capraro; A. Di Paola; C. Facchinetti; Tommaso Occhipinti; A. Possenti; D. Ponikvar; Enrico Verroi; P. Zoccarato

We observed the Crab pulsar in October 2008 at the Copernico Telescope in Asiago - Cima Ekar with the optical photon counter Aqueye (the Asiago Quantum Eye) which has the best temporal resolution and accuracy ever achieved in the optical domain (hundreds of picoseconds). Our goal was to perform a detailed analysis of the optical period and phase drift of the main peak of the Crab pulsar and compare it with the Jodrell Bank ephemerides. We determined the position of the main peak using the steepest zero of the cross-correlation function between the pulsar signal and an accurate optical template. The pulsar rotational period and period derivative have been measured with great accuracy using observations covering only a 2 day time interval. The error on the period is 1.7 ps, limited only by the statistical uncertainty. Both the rotational frequency and its first derivative are in agreement with those from the Jodrell Bank radio ephemerides archive. We also found evidence of the optical peak leading the radio one by ~230 microseconds. The distribution of phase-residuals of the whole dataset is slightly wider than that of a synthetic signal generated as a sequence of pulses distributed in time with the probability proportional to the pulse shape, such as the average count rate and background level are those of the Crab pulsar observed with Aqueye. The counting statistics and quality of the data allowed us to determine the pulsar period and period derivative with great accuracy in 2 days only. The time of arrival of the optical peak of the Crab pulsar leads the radio one in agreement with what recently reported in the literature. The distribution of the phase residuals can be approximated with a Gaussian and is consistent with being completely caused by photon noise (for the best data sets).


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

QuantEYE: a quantum optics instrument for extremely large telescopes

Giampiero Naletto; Cesare Barbieri; Dainis Dravins; Tommaso Occhipinti; Fabrizio Tamburini; Vania Da Deppo; S. Fornasier; Mauro D'Onofrio; Robert A. E. Fosbury; Ricky Nilsson; Helena Uthas; L. Zampieri

We have carried out a conceptual study for an instrument (QuantEYE) capable to detect and measure photon-stream statistics, e.g. power spectra or autocorrelation functions. Such functions increase with the square of the detected signal, implying an enormously increased sensitivity at the future Extremely Large Telescopes, such as the OverWhelmingly Large (OWL) telescope of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). Furthermore, QuantEYE will have the capability of exploring astrophysical variability on microsecond and nanosecond scales, down to the quantum-optical limit. Expected observable phenomena include instabilities of photon-gas bubbles in accretion flows, p-mode oscillations in neutron stars, and quantum-optical photon bunching in time. This paper describes QuantEYE, an instrument aimed to realize the just described science, proposed for installation at the ESO OWL telescope focal plane. The adopted optical solution is relatively simple and possible with actual technologies, the main constraint essentially being the present limited availability of very fast photon counting detector arrays. Also some possible alternative designs are described, assuming a future technology development of fast photon counting detector arrays.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Optical phase coherent timing of the Crab nebula pulsar with Iqueye at the ESO New Technology Telescope

L. Zampieri; Andrej Čadež; Cesare Barbieri; Giampiero Naletto; M. Calvani; Mauro Barbieri; Enrico Verroi; P. Zoccarato; Tommaso Occhipinti

The Crab nebula pulsar was observed in 2009 January and December with a novel very fast optical photon counter, Iqueye, mounted at the ESO 3.5 m New Technology Telescope. Thanks to the exquisite quality of the Iqueye data, we computed accurate phase coherent timing solutions for the two observing runs and over the entire year 2009. Our statistical uncertainty on the determination of the phase of the main pulse and the rotational period of the pulsar for short (a few days) time intervals are


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

The optical light curve of the LMC pulsar B0540-69 in 2009

Mauro Barbieri; P. Zoccarato; Enrico Verroi; Tommaso Occhipinti; C. Germanà; Cesare Barbieri; Giampiero Naletto; Luca Zampieri; A Possenti; Serena Gradari

\approx 1 \, \mu


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Upgrade of Iqueye, a novel photon-counting photometer for the ESO New Technology Telescope

Giampiero Naletto; Cesare Barbieri; Enrico Verroi; Ivan Capraro; C. Facchinetti; Serena Gradari; Tommaso Occhipinti; P. Zoccarato; V. Da Deppo

s and ~0.5 ps, respectively. Comparison with the Jodrell Bank radio ephemerides shows that the optical pulse leads the radio one by ~240

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