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271 result(s) for "Govoni, F."
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A radio ridge connecting two galaxy clusters in a filament of the cosmic web
Galaxy clusters are the most massive gravitationally bound structures in the Universe.They grow by accreting smaller structures in a merging process that produces shocks and turbulence in the intracluster gas. We observed a ridge of radio emission connecting the merging galaxy clusters Abell 0399 and Abell 0401 with the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) telescope network at 140 megahertz. This emission requires a population of relativistic electrons and a magnetic field located in a filament between the two galaxy clusters. We performed simulations to show that a volume-filling distribution of weak shocks may reaccelerate a preexisting population of relativistic particles, producing emission at radio wavelengths that illuminates the magnetic ridge.
Observations of Extended Radio Emission in Clusters
We review observations of extended regions of radio emission in clusters; these include diffuse emission in ‘relics’, and the large central regions commonly referred to as ‘halos’. The spectral observations, as well as Faraday rotation measurements of background and cluster radio sources, provide the main evidence for large-scale intracluster magnetic fields and significant densities of relativistic electrons. Implications from these observations on acceleration mechanisms of these electrons are reviewed, including turbulent and shock acceleration, and also the origin of some of the electrons in collisions of relativistic protons by ambient protons in the (thermal) gas. Improved knowledge of non-thermal phenomena in clusters requires more extensive and detailed radio measurements; we briefly review prospects for future observations.
The MISTRAL Instrument and the Characterization of Its Detector Array
The MIllimeter Sardinia radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements KIDs, MISTRAL, is a cryogenic LEKID camera, operating in the W band ( 77 - 103 GHz ) from the Gregorian focus of the 64-m aperture Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT), in Italy. This instrument features a high angular resolution ( ∼ 12 arcsec ) and a wide instantaneous field of view ( ∼ 4 arcmin ), allowing continuum surveys of the mm-wave sky with many scientific targets, including observations of galaxy clusters via the Sunyaev–Zel’dovich effect. In May 2023, MISTRAL has been installed at SRT for the technical commissioning. In this contribution, we will describe the MISTRAL instrument focusing on the laboratory characterization of its focal plane: a ∼ 400 -pixel LEKID array. We will show the optical performance of the detectors highlighting the procedure for the identification of the pixels on the focal plane, the measurements of the optical responsivity and NEP, and the estimation of the optical efficiency.
The Cryogenic System of the MISTRAL Instrument: Design and In-lab Performance
We describe the design and performance of the cryostat and the multi-stage sub-K single-shot sorption cooler for the MIllimeter Sardinia Radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements kids (MISTRAL) experiment. MISTRAL is a W-band (77 - 103 GHz) Ti/Al bi-layer Lumped Elements Kinetic Inductance Detectors (LEKIDs) camera working at the Gregorian focus of the 64 m aperture Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT), located in Sardinia (Italy). The cryogenic system, based on a 1.5 W at 4.2 K Pulse Tube (PT) cryocooler, provides the 4 K base temperature for the sub-K refrigerator, and cools down the cold optics and the filters chain of the instrument. The sub-K sorption cooler consists of two intermediate stages, 4 He and 3 He sorption refrigerators that allow to reduce the heat load on the ultra-cold head, and a twin stage of 3 He sorption refrigerator providing the 0.2 K operation temperature for the 415-pixel array of LEKIDs. MISTRAL experiment was installed at SRT in May 2023, the technical commissioning started in June 2023. We will show the performance of the system in the laboratory.
Pulse Tube Cooler with > 100 m Flexible Lines for Operation of Cryogenic Detector Arrays at Large Radiotelescopes
Large radio and mm–wave telescopes use very sensitive detectors requiring cryogenic cooling to reduce detector noise. Pulse Tubes (PT) cryocoolers are widely used to reach temperatures of a few K, defining the base temperature of further sub–K stages. This technology represents an effective solution for continuous operation, featuring high stability and reduced vibration levels on the detectors. However, the compressor used to operate the PT is a significant source of microphonics and electrical noise, making its use at the focus of large steerable telescopes not advisable. This calls for long flexible helium lines between the compressor, operated at the base of the radio telescope, and the cold–head, mounted in the receivers cabin with the receiver detectors. The distance between the receiver cabin and the base can be >100 m long for large radio telescopes. In the framework of our development of the MIllimetric Sardinia radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements kids (MISTRAL), a W–band camera working at the Gregorian focus of the 64 m aperture Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT) with an array of Lumped Elements Kinetic Inductance Detectors (LEKID), we have developed a cryogenic system based on a PT refrigerator as the first cooling stage. Here we describe the MISTRAL cryogenic system and focus on the validation of the use of a commercial PT Cryocooler with 100 m helium lines running from the cold head to the compressor unit. The configuration allows us to operate the 0.9 W PT reaching below 4.2 K with 0.5 W dissipation.
MISTRAL and its KIDs
The MIllimetric Sardinia radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements KIDs, MISTRAL, is a cryogenic W-band (77–103 GH) LEKID camera which will be integrated at the Gregorian focus of the 64 m aperture Sardinia Radio Telescope, in Italy, in Autumn 2022. This instrument, thanks to its high angular resolution ( ∼ 13 arcsec ) and the wide instantaneous field of view ( ∼ 4 arcmin ), will allow continuum surveys of the mm-wave sky with a variety of scientific targets, spanning from extragalactic astrophysics to solar system science. In this contribution, we will describe the design of the MISTRAL camera, with a particular focus on the optimisation and test of a prototype of the focal plane.
MISTRAL observations during the commissioning phase at the Sardinia Radio Telescope
MISTRAL is a new facility instrument open to the scientific community that will help investigate the ’missing baryon’ problem, as well as many other scientific cases from extragalactic astrophysics to solar system science. The MIllimeter Sardinia radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements KIDs (MISTRAL) is a cryogenic W-band camera, operating at 90 GHz (frequency band 78-103 GHz), equipped with 415 LEKIDs which has been mounted at the Gregorian focus of the 64 m fully steerable radio telescope Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT), in Italy, in May 2023. MISTRAL will take advantage of its 12 ′′ of angular resolution, a 4 ′ wide instantaneous field of view and its high sensitivity, which will make this camera one of the most competitive instrument to observe the mm-wave sky. MISTRAL is currently under technical commissioning and in this contribution we will report the current status and performances of the instrument as well as the operations done during the first year of technical commissioning.
Millimetric Sardinia radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements kids
MISTRAL is a millimetric camera working in the W-band (78–103 GHz) which will take data from the Sardinia Radio Telescope, the Italian 64-m radio telescope located 50 km form Cagliari, at 600m above the sea level, in Sardinia. It is being built as a facility instrument by the Sapienza University for INAF, that manages the radio telescope, under a PON contract. It will consist of a compact cryostat hosting the re–imaging optics, cooled at 4K, and a 408–pixel array of photon–noise limited lumped element kinetic inductance detectors fabricated at CNR-IFN and cooled at a base temperature lower than 300mK. MISTRAL will be able to investigate a long list of scientific targets spanning from extragalactic astrophysics to solar system science, with high angular resolution (~ 12 arcsec), including Sunyaev Zel’dovich effect measurements and the study of the Cosmic Web.
Observing galaxy clusters and the cosmic web through the Sunyaev Zel’dovich effect with MISTRAL
Galaxy clusters and surrounding medium, can be studied using X-ray bremsstrahlung emission and Sunyaev Zel’dovich (SZ) effect. Both astrophysical probes, sample the same environment with different parameters dependance. The SZ effect is relatively more sensitive in low density environments and thus is useful to study the filamentary structures of the cosmic web. In addition, observations of the matter distribution require high angular resolution in order to be able to map the matter distribution within and around galaxy clusters. MISTRAL is a camera working at 90GHz which, once coupled to the Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT), can reach 12″ angular resolution over 4′ field of view (f.o.v.). The forecasted sensitivity drives to a Noise Equivalent Flux Density of ≃ 10–15 mJy √ s and the mapping speed is MS = 380′ 2 mJy −2 h −1 . MISTRAL was recently installed at the focus of the SRT and soon will take its first photons.