V. Fioretti
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Featured researches published by V. Fioretti.
Experimental Astronomy | 2017
A. De Angelis; V. Tatischeff; U. Oberlack; I. Grenier; L. Hanlon; Roland Walter; A. Argan; P. von Ballmoos; A. Bulgarelli; I. Donnarumma; Margarida Hernanz; Irfan Kuvvetli; M. Pearce; Andrzej A. Zdziarski; A. Aboudan; M. Ajello; G. Ambrosi; D. Bernard; E. Bernardini; V. Bonvicini; A. Brogna; M. Branchesi; Carl Budtz-Jørgensen; A. Bykov; R. Campana; M. Cardillo; Paolo S. Coppi; D. de Martino; R. Diehl; M. Doro
Abstracte-ASTROGAM (‘enhanced ASTROGAM’) is a breakthrough Observatory space mission, with a detector composed by a Silicon tracker, a calorimeter, and an anticoincidence system, dedicated to the study of the non-thermal Universe in the photon energy range from 0.3 MeV to 3 GeV – the lower energy limit can be pushed to energies as low as 150 keV, albeit with rapidly degrading angular resolution, for the tracker, and to 30 keV for calorimetric detection. The mission is based on an advanced space-proven detector technology, with unprecedented sensitivity, angular and energy resolution, combined with polarimetric capability. Thanks to its performance in the MeV-GeV domain, substantially improving its predecessors, e-ASTROGAM will open a new window on the non-thermal Universe, making pioneering observations of the most powerful Galactic and extragalactic sources, elucidating the nature of their relativistic outflows and their effects on the surroundings. With a line sensitivity in the MeV energy range one to two orders of magnitude better than previous generation instruments, e-ASTROGAM will determine the origin of key isotopes fundamental for the understanding of supernova explosion and the chemical evolution of our Galaxy. The mission will provide unique data of significant interest to a broad astronomical community, complementary to powerful observatories such as LIGO-Virgo-GEO600-KAGRA, SKA, ALMA, E-ELT, TMT, LSST, JWST, Athena, CTA, IceCube, KM3NeT, and the promise of eLISA.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
C. Pittori; F. Verrecchia; A. Bulgarelli; A. Giuliani; I. Donnarumma; A. Argan; Alessio Trois; F. Lucarelli; M. Marisaldi; E. Del Monte; V. Fioretti; A. Zoli; G. Piano; P. Munar-Adrover; L. A. Antonelli; G. Barbiellini; P. A. Caraveo; Paolo Walter Cattaneo; Enrico Costa; M. Feroci; A. Ferrari; F. Longo; S. Mereghetti; G. Minervini; A. Morselli; Luigi Pacciani; A. Pellizzoni; P. Picozza; M. Pilia; A. Rappoldi
We report the results of an extensive search in the AGILE data for a gamma-ray counterpart of the LIGO gravitational wave event GW150914. Currently in spinning mode, AGILE has the potential of covering with its gamma-ray instrument 80 % of the sky more than 100 times a day. It turns out that AGILE came within a minute from the event time of observing the accessible GW150914 localization region. Interestingly, the gamma-ray detector exposed about 65 % of this region during the 100 s time intervals centered at -100 s and +300 s from the event time. We determine a 2-sigma flux upper limit in the band 50 MeV - 10 GeV,
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2013
A. Morselli; A. Argan; Guido Barbiellini; W. Bonvicini; A. Bulgarelli; Martina Cardillo; Andrew C. N. Chen; Paolo S. Coppi; Anna Maria Di Giorgio; I. Donnarumma; Ettore Del Monte; V. Fioretti; Marcello Galli; Manuela Giusti; Attilio Ferrari; Fabio Fuschino; P. Giommi; Andrea Giuliani; Claudio Labanti; Paolo Lipari; F. Longo; M. Marisaldi; S. Molinari; Carlos Munoz; Torsten Neubert; P. Orleański; Josep M. Paredes; M. Angeles Perez-Garcia; G. Piano; Piergiorgio Picozza
UL = 1.9 \times 10^{-8} \rm \, erg \, cm^{-2} \, s^{-1}
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
V. Tatischeff; P. von Ballmoos; L. Hanlon; U. Oberlack; Alessio Aboudan; A. Argan; Denis Bernard; A. Brogna; A. Bulgarelli; A. Bykov; R. Campana; P. A. Caraveo; M. Cardillo; Paolo S. Coppi; A. De Angelis; R. Diehl; I. Donnarumma; V. Fioretti; A. Giuliani; I. A. Grenier; J.E. Grove; C. Hamadache; Dieter H. Hartmann; M. Hernanz; J. Isern; G. Kanbach; J. Kiener; J. Knödlseder; Claudio Labanti; P. Laurent
obtained about 300 s after the event. The timing of this measurement is the fastest ever obtained for GW150914, and significantly constrains the electromagnetic emission of a possible high-energy counterpart. We also carried out a search for a gamma-ray precursor and delayed emission over timescales ranging from minutes to days: in particular, we obtained an optimal exposure during the interval -150 / -30 s. In all these observations, we do not detect a significant signal associated with GW150914. We do not reveal the weak transient source reported by Fermi-GBM 0.4 s after the event time. However, even though a gamma-ray counterpart of the GW150914 event was not detected, the prospects for future AGILE observations of gravitational wave sources are decidedly promising.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
S. Sabatini; I. Donnarumma; Alessio Trois; A. Bulgarelli; A. Argan; G. Barbiellini; Paolo Walter Cattaneo; Andrew W. Chen; E. Del Monte; V. Fioretti; F. Gianotti; A. Giuliani; F. Longo; F. Lucarelli; A. Morselli; F. Verrecchia; P. A. Caraveo
The energy range between 10 and 50 MeV is an experimentally very difficult range and remained uncovered since the time of COMPTEL. Here we propose a possible mission to cover this energy range.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
A. W. Chen; A. Argan; A. Bulgarelli; Paolo Walter Cattaneo; T. Contessi; A. Giuliani; C. Pittori; G. Pucella; Alessio Trois; Francesco Verrecchia; G. Barbiellini; P. A. Caraveo; S. Colafrancesco; Enrico Costa; G. De Paris; E. Del Monte; G. Di Cocco; I. Donnarumma; A. Ferrari; M. Feroci; V. Fioretti; M. Fiorini; Fabio Fuschino; M. Galli; F. Gianotti; P. Giommi; M. Giusti; Claudio Labanti; Igor Y. Lapshov; F. Lazzarotto
e-ASTROGAM is a gamma-ray space mission to be proposed as the M5 Medium-size mission of the European Space Agency. It is dedicated to the observation of the Universe with unprecedented sensitivity in the energy range 0.2 { 100 MeV, extending up to GeV energies, together with a groundbreaking polarization capability. It is designed to substantially improve the COMPTEL and Fermi sensitivities in the MeV-GeV energy range and to open new windows of opportunity for astrophysical and fundamental physics space research. e-ASTROGAM will operate as an open astronomical observatory, with a core science focused on (1) the activity from extreme particle accelerators, including gamma-ray bursts and active galactic nuclei and the link of jet astrophysics to the new astronomy of gravitational waves, neutrinos, ultra-high energy cosmic rays, (2) the high-energy mysteries of the Galactic center and inner Galaxy, including the activity of the supermassive black hole, the Fermi Bubbles, the origin of the Galactic positrons, and the search for dark matter signatures in a new energy window; (3) nucleosynthesis and chemical evolution, including the life cycle of elements produced by supernovae in the Milky Way and the Local Group of galaxies. e-ASTROGAM will be ideal for the study of high-energy sources in general, including pulsars and pulsar wind nebulae, accreting neutron stars and black holes, novae, supernova remnants, and magnetars. And it will also provide important contributions to solar and terrestrial physics. The e-ASTROGAM telescope is optimized for the simultaneous detection of Compton and pair-producing gamma-ray events over a large spectral band. It is based on a very high technology readiness level for all subsystems and includes many innovative features for the detectors and associated electronics.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
A. Bulgarelli; V. Fioretti; Pino Malaguti; Massimo Trifoglio; F. Gianotti
We present a study of the Angular Resolution of the AGILE gamma-ray imaging detector (GRID) that is operational in space since April 2007. The AGILE instrument is made of an array of 12 planes each equipped with a Tungsten converter and Silicon micros trip detectors and is sensitive in the energy range 50 MeV - 10 GeV. Among the space instruments devoted to gamma-ray astrophysics, AGILE uniquely exploits an analog readout system with dedicated electronics coupled with Silicon detectors. We show the results of Monte Carlo simulations carried out to reproduce the gamma-ray detection by the GRID, and we compare them to in-flight data. We use the Crab (pulsar + Nebula) system for discussion of real data performance, since its E^{-2} energy spectrum is representative of the majority of gamma-ray sources. For Crab-like spectrum sources, the GRID angular resolution (FWHM of ~4deg at 100 MeV; ~0.8deg at 1 GeV; ~0.9deg integrating the full energy band from 100 MeV to tens of GeV) is stable across a large field of view, being characterized by a flat response up to 30deg off-axis. A comparison of the angular resolution obtained by the two operational gamma-ray instruments, AGILE-GRID and Fermi-LAT, is interesting in view of future gamma-ray missions, that are currently under study. The two instruments exploit different detector configurations affecting the angular resolution: the former being optimized in the readout and track reconstruction especially in the low-energy band, the latter in terms of converter thickness and power consumption. We show that, despite these differences, the angular resolution of both instruments is very similar between 100 MeV and a few GeV.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
A. Bulgarelli; Massimo Trifoglio; F. Gianotti; N. Parmiggiani; V. Fioretti; A. Chen; S. Vercellone; C. Pittori; Francesco Verrecchia; F. Lucarelli; P. Santolamazza; G. Fanari; P. Giommi; Domenico Beneventano; A. Argan; Alessio Trois; E. Scalise; F. Longo; A. Pellizzoni; G. Pucella; S. Colafrancesco; V. Conforti; P. Tempesta; M. Cerone; P. Sabatini; G. Annoni; G. Valentini; L. Salotti
Context. AGILE is a γ-ray astrophysics mission which has been in orbit since 23 April 2007 and continues to operate reliably. The γ-ray detector, AGILE-GRID, has observed Galactic and extragalactic sources, many of which were collected in the first AGILE Catalog. Aims. We present the calibration of the AGILE-GRID using in-flight data and Monte Carlo simulations, producing instrument response functions (IRFs) for the effective area (A eff), energy dispersion probability (EDP), and point spread function (PSF), each as a function of incident direction in instrument coordinates and energy. Methods. We performed Monte Carlo simulations at different γ-ray energies and incident angles, including background rejection filters and Kalman filter-based γ-ray reconstruction. Long integrations of in-flight observations of the Vela, Crab and Geminga sources in broad and narrow energy bands were used to validate and improve the accuracy of the instrument response functions. Results. The weighted average PSFs as a function of spectra correspond well to the data for all sources and energy bands. Conclusions. Changes in the interpolation of the PSF from Monte Carlo data and in the procedure for construction of the energy-weighted effective areas have improved the correspondence between predicted and observed fluxes and spectra of celestial calibration sources, reducing false positives and obviating the need for post-hoc energy-dependent scaling factors. The new IRFs have been publicly available from the AGILE Science Data Center since November 25, 2011, while the changes in the analysis software will be distributed in an upcoming release.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2016
A. Bulgarelli; V. Fioretti; Andrea Zoli; Juan José Rodríguez-Vázquez; G. De Cesare; A. De Rosa; E. Lyard; D. Bastieri; S. Lombardi; G. Tosti; Sonia Bergamaschi; Domenico Beneventano; G. Lamanna; Jean Jacquemier; K. Kosack; L. A. Antonelli; C. Boisson; J. Borkowski; A. Carosi; V. Conforti; P. Colomé; R. de los Reyes; Jon Dumm; P. Evans; Matthias Fuessling; D. Gotz; R. Graciani; F. Gianotti; P. Grandi; J. A. Hinton
BoGEMMS, (Bologna Geant4 Multi-Mission Simulator) is a software project for fast simulation of payload on board of scientific satellites for prompt background evaluation that has been developed at the INAF/IASF Bologna. By exploiting the Geant4 set of libraries, BoGEMMS allows to interactively set the geometrical and physical parameters (e.g. physics list, materials and thicknesses), recording the interactions (e.g. energy deposit, position, interacting particle) in NASA FITS and CERN root format output files and filtering the output as a real observation in space, to finally produce the background detected count rate and spectra. Four different types of output can be produced by the BoGEMMS capturing different aspects of the interactions. The simulator can also run in parallel jobs and store the results in a centralized server via xrootd protocol. The BoGEMMS is a multi-mission tool, generally designed to be applied to any high-energy mission for which the shielding and instruments performances analysis is required.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
C. Macculi; A. Argan; Matteo D'Andrea; Simone Lotti; M. Laurenza; Luigi Piro; M. Biasotti; D. Corsini; F. Gatti; G. Torrioli; M. Fiorini; S. Molendi; M. Uslenghi; T. Mineo; A. Bulgarelli; V. Fioretti; E. Cavazzuti
In recent years, a new generation of space missions has offered great opportunities for discovery in high-energy astrophysics. In this article we focus on the scientific operations of the Gamma-Ray Imaging Detector (GRID) on board the AGILE space mission. AGILE-GRID, sensitive in the energy range of 30?MeV-30?GeV, has detected many ?-ray transients of both galactic and extragalactic origin. This work presents the AGILE innovative approach to fast ?-ray transient detection, which is a challenging task and a crucial part of the AGILE scientific program. The goals are to describe (1) the AGILE Gamma-Ray Alert System, (2) a new algorithm for blind search identification of transients within a short processing time, (3) the AGILE procedure for ?-ray transient alert management, and (4) the likelihood of ratio tests that are necessary to evaluate the post-trial statistical significance of the results. Special algorithms and an optimized sequence of tasks are necessary to reach our goal. Data are automatically analyzed at every orbital downlink by an alert pipeline operating on different timescales. As proper flux thresholds are exceeded, alerts are automatically generated and sent as SMS messages to cellular telephones, via e-mail, and via push notifications from an application for smartphones and tablets. These alerts are crosschecked with the results of two pipelines, and a manual analysis is performed. Being a small scientific-class mission, AGILE is characterized by optimization of both scientific analysis and ground-segment resources. The system is capable of generating alerts within two to three hours of a data downlink, an unprecedented reaction time in ?-ray astrophysics.