Seleziona una pagina

Lo Spazio come bene comune dell’umanità

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

Ad oggi, ci sono in orbita circa 10.000 satelliti operativi (e non meno di 3.000 per così dire “defunti”). Offrono servizi di grande utilità per migliorare la qualità della nostra vita, ma occorre considerare le conseguenze della crescita esplosiva nel loro numero. Benché operino nello spazio, i satelliti hanno infatti un impatto non trascurabile sulla vita e sulle attività che si svolgono sulla Terra e sulla qualità della nostra atmosfera. Lo spazio è parte integrante dell’ecosistema terrestre e prima ce ne renderemo conto meglio sarà.

Status and future of 21-cm cosmology during the first billion years

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

The 21-cm hyperfine line of neutral hydrogen is set to revolutionize studies of the first billion years, spanning the cosmic dawn of the first stars and eventual reionization of our Universe. I will discuss the potential of this probe in learning about the unknown astrophysics of the first galaxies as well as physical cosmology. Current upper limits on the cosmic 21-cm power spectrum already provide new insights into the heating of the intergalactic medium, and the X-ray sources in the first galaxies. I will discuss the upcoming steps, including the main challenges, that will eventually lead to the Nobel prize-worthy 3D map of half of our observable Universe with the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) telescope.

How is magnetism affecting the properties of solar and stellar acoustic modes?

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

Outside of solar neutrinos, the only way to directly probing solar and stellar interiors is to use seismic techniques, i.e. studying the waves propagating inside them. In the case of the Sun, acoustic waves are excited by turbulent motion in the convective envelope, and propagate towards the interior, creating a variety of standing pressure modes (p modes). By investigating how small perturbations influence the modes parameters, it is possible to probe the structural and dynamical properties of the star such as internal rotation and mixing, chemical composition, density, convection zone depth, etc. In the stellar case, asteroseismology allows the inference of the stellar fundamental parameters such as mass, radius, and age. Although, solar p-modes frequency, amplitude, and energy vary in relation with the solar magnetic cycle and similar variations were observed for other magnetically active solar-type stars, such a variability is often overlooked in stellar modelling. In the context of the preparation of the PLATO mission, whose aim is to characterize Earth-like planets orbiting solar-like stars in part thanks to asteroseismology, we need to better understand the relation between magnetic variations and modes parameters. In this seminar, I will focus on the excitation of the solar p modes using the last 28 years of data from the SoHO/GOLF instrument, with a method gathering a better temporal resolution compared to classical approaches. In this framework, I was able to perform a statistical study of the energy of the modes. Summing the energy of all studied modes, I will demonstrate that there is a discrepancy between the observed excitation rate and the expected rate under the hypothesis of excitation driven entirely by turbulent convection. I will discuss the link between this discrepancy and surface magnetism effects such as flares and coronal mass ejection. In conclusion, I will explain how a better understanding of the relation between the dynamo mechanism and modes properties variation across time would allow us to improve the constraint we have on stellar dynamics and obtained refined stellar fundamental parameters.

Probing Impacts of Stellar Variability within HST WFC3/STIS and Ariel Tier 2 and Tier 3 Observations with Activity Metrics

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

Stellar activity produces two main diagnostics within low-resolution exoplanet transmission spectra. Its highly chromatic nature imparts trends in the underlying spectrum that become most noticeable at shorter wavelengths due to the increased contrast between the flux from the active regions (i.e. spots and/or faculae) and the quiet photosphere. The second characteristic is that activity is inherently time-variable, predominantly modulated by stellar rotation as active regions rotate into and out of view but also with contributions from longer timescales of evolution/decay and even long-term activity cycles e.g. maxima and minima (although certain configurations e.g. polar spots and active latitudes will be more resistant to this). This variability can reveal itself through subsequent observations of the system and is both useful and challenging; it can further help us to identify and constrain potential contamination but also means that observations at different epochs may require individual corrections before they can robustly be combined and analysed together which will become increasingly difficult for smaller planets as the SNR of each visit progressively decreases. In this seminar I will present how both diagnostics have been used with archival HST WFC3 and STIS datasets to create two new activity metrics that are highly complementary to existing indicators. I will also show preliminary results surrounding how this work is being extended to Tier 2 and Tier 3 Ariel simulations to explore how stellar variability will impact our ability to stack visits to obtain the required SNR for these tiers.

Non-standard signatures from CMB polarisation with an insight into the new technological challenges

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

In this seminar, I will focus on non-standard signatures from CMB polarisation that may indicate the existence of new phenomena beyond the standard models of cosmology and particle physics, from both theoretical and observational perspectives. ESA's Planck mission has observed CMB temperature anisotropies at the cosmic variance limit, but polarisation remains to be further investigated. CMB polarisation data are important not only because they contribute to provide tighter constraints on cosmological parameters but also because they allow the study of physical processes that would be excluded if only the CMB temperature maps were considered. I use polarisation data into account to assess the statistical significance of the anomalies currently observed only in the CMB temperature map, and to constrain the Cosmic Birefringence (CB) effect, which is expected in parity-violating extensions of the standard electromagnetism.
Measuring CMB polarisation is technically challenging because the polarised signal is much fainter than the temperature signal, and accurate polarisation estimates require exquisite control of systematic effects. To investigate the impact of spurious signals in upcoming CMB polarisation experiments, I present a study of the interplay between half-wave plate (HWP) non-idealities and the beams of the instrument for the next generation of CMB experiments, with an insight into how this instrumental contamination affects the measurement of the cosmic birefringence effect.

Line shape modeling for the characterization of magnetized plasmas in fusion research and astrophysics

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

In this talk, we report on a selection of issues present in the elaboration of spectroscopic models for magnetized plasma diagnostic. A focus is put on tokamak edge and white dwarf atmosphere plasma conditions. In both cases, the observed spectra exhibit clean lines, either in absorption or in emission, denoting the presence of neutral species (atoms). An analysis of the line shape and intensity yields information on the plasma parameters provided a suitable physical model is used. We first discuss in detail the physical mechanisms underlying the broadening of the spectral lines due to the plasma microfield (Stark effect), and we next report on models and codes that have been developed in our group at the PIIM laboratory. Applications to the fitting of observed spectra – both in magnetic fusion and astrophysics – are presented. Motivated by current research trends, we also discuss specific issues related to the presence of strong external magnetic field (Zeeman effect etc.) and report on some recent works done in atomic physics for the improvement of line shape models.

Elucidating diffuse Galactic synchrotron emission for precision 21cm and CMB cosmology

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

The next generation of Cosmic Microwave Background experiments are poised to probe the inflationary period of the Universe through the measurement of primordial B-modes, whilst 21cm experiments are observing the reionization history of the early Universe and formation of Large-Scale Structure through the mapping of neutral hydrogen. These two complementary fields span the radio to microwave frequency regimes and share a pivotal data reduction task: foreground component separation.

Diffuse Galactic synchrotron emission is the dominant foreground for arcmin/degree scale cosmological surveys operating across MHz frequencies in intensity, and at all frequencies under 60 GHz in polarised intensity. In this talk I will present measurements of the synchrotron spectral index and curvature between 73 MHz and 1 GHz through the combined use of pilot MeerKLASS, Haslam, Maipu/MU and LWA data. I will discuss the advances that can be made to component separation algorithms thanks to more sophisticated foreground emission modelling and will present a spatially complex, all-sky model of the synchrotron spectral index formed using convolutional neural networks trained on sets of both high- and low-resolution empirical data. Such advances will, and already are, expanding our understanding of the spatial and spectral form of this complex emission; ameliorating component separation for both CMB and 21cm intensity mapping experiments.

Precision Meter-wavelength Polarimetry with the Very Large Array

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

Accurate imaging polarimetry at meter wavelengths requires removal of the highly variable ionospheric Faraday rotation (IFRM) with an accuracy of 0.1 rad/m^2 or better. Models to estimate the VTEC using GNSS timing data, combined with global terrestrial magnetic field models have been developed over the past 25 years. Estimating the accuracy of these models requires observations of a source of known intrinsic electric vector position angle (EVPA) over a wide rage of ionospheric conditions.