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Ettore Del Monte

Bio: Ettore Del Monte is an academic researcher from INAF. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polarimetry & Detector. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 42 publications receiving 516 citations. Previous affiliations of Ettore Del Monte include Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Shuang-Nan Zhang1, Andrea Santangelo1, Andrea Santangelo2, Marco Feroci3  +150 moreInstitutions (21)
TL;DR: The enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry mission—eXTP is a space science mission designed to study fundamental physics under extreme conditions of density, gravity and magnetism and will be a very powerful observatory for astrophysics that will provide observations of unprecedented quality on a variety of galactic and extragalactic objects.
Abstract: In this paper we present the enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry mission—eXTP. eXTP is a space science mission designed to study fundamental physics under extreme conditions of density, gravity and magnetism. The mission aims at determining the equation of state of matter at supra-nuclear density, measuring effects of QED, and understanding the dynamics of matter in strong-field gravity. In addition to investigating fundamental physics, eXTP will be a very powerful observatory for astrophysics that will provide observations of unprecedented quality on a variety of galactic and extragalactic objects. In particular, its wide field monitoring capabilities will be highly instrumental to detect the electro-magnetic counterparts of gravitational wave sources. The paper provides a detailed description of: (1) the technological and technical aspects, and the expected performance of the instruments of the scientific payload; (2) the elements and functions of the mission, from the spacecraft to the ground segment.

206 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Shuang-Nan Zhang, Andrea Santangelo, Marco Feroci, Yupeng Xu, Fangjun Lu, Yong Chen, Hua Feng, Shu Zhang, Søren Brandt, Margarita Hernanz, Luca Baldini, Enrico Bozzo, Riccardo Campana, Alessandra De Rosa, Yongwei Dong, Y. Evangelista, Vladimir Karas, Norbert Meidinger, A. Meuris, Kirpal Nandra, Teng Pan, Giovanni Pareschi, Piotr Orleanski, Qiushi Huang, Stéphane Schanne, G. Sironi, Daniele Spiga, Jiri Svoboda, Gianpiero Tagliaferri, C. Tenzer, Andrea Vacchi, Silvia Zane, D. Walton, Zhanshan Wang, Berend Winter, Xin Wu, Jean in 't Zand, M. Ahangarianabhari, Giovanni Ambrosi, Filippo Ambrosino, Marco Barbera, Stefano Basso, Jörg Bayer, Ronaldo Bellazzini, Pierluigi Bellutti, Bruna Bertucci, Giuseppe Bertuccio, Giacomo Borghi, X. L. Cao, Franck Cadoux, F. Ceraudo, Tian-Xiang Chen, Yu-Peng Chen, Jerome Chevenez, Marta Civitani, Wei Cui, Wei-Wei Cui, Thomas Dauser, Ettore Del Monte, Sergio Di Cosimo, Sebastian Diebold, Victor Doroshenko, Michal Dovciak, Yuan-Yuan Du, L. Ducci, Qingmei Fan, Yannick Favre, F. Fuschino, J. L. Galvez, Min Gao, Ming-Yu Ge, O. Gevin, Marco Grassi, QuanYing Gu, Yu-Dong Gu, Da-Wei Han, Bin Hong, Wei Hu, Long Ji, Shu-Mei Jia, W. C. Jiang, T. Kennedy, Ingo Kreykenbohm, Irfan Kuvvetli, Claudio Labanti, Luca Latronico, Gang Li, Mao-Shun Li, Xian Li, Wei Li, Zheng-Wei Li, Olivier Limousin, Hongwei Liu, Xiao-Jing Liu, Bo Lu, Tao Luo, D. Macera, Piero Malcovati, Adrian Martindale, M. Michalska, Bin Meng, Massimo Minuti, Alfredo Morbidini, Fabio Muleri, Stéphane Paltani, Emanuele Perinati, Antonino Picciotto, Claudio Piemonte, Jin-Lu Qu, A. Rachevski, Irina Rashevskaya, Jerome Rodriguez, Thomas Schanz, Zhengxiang Shen, LiZhi Sheng, JiangBo Song, Li-Ming Song, Carmelo Sgrò, L. Sun, Ying Tan, Phil Uttley, Juan Wang, LangPing Wang, Yu-Sa Wang, Anna L. Watts, XiangYang Wen, Jörn Wilms, Shaolin Xiong, J. W. Yang, Sheng Yang, Yanji Yang, Nian Yu, Wenda Zhang, Gianluigi Zampa, N. Zampa, Andrzej A. Zdziarski, Aimei Zhang, Chengmo Zhang, Fan Zhang, Long Zhang, Tong Zhang, Yi Zhang, Xiaoli Zhang, Zi-Liang Zhang, Baosheng Zhao, ShiJie Zheng, Yupeng Zhou, Nicola Zorzi, J. Frans Zwart 
TL;DR: The enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry (eXTP) mission as discussed by the authors is a space science mission designed to study fundamental physics under extreme conditions of density, gravity and magnetism.
Abstract: In this paper we present the enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry mission - eXTP. eXTP is a space science mission designed to study fundamental physics under extreme conditions of density, gravity and magnetism. The mission aims at determining the equation of state of matter at supra-nuclear density, measuring effects of QED, and understanding the dynamics of matter in strong-field gravity. In addition to investigating fundamental physics, eXTP will be a very powerful observatory for astrophysics that will provide observations of unprecedented quality on a variety of galactic and extragalactic objects. In particular, its wide field monitoring capabilities will be highly instrumental to detect the electro-magnetic counterparts of gravitational wave sources. The paper provides a detailed description of: (1) the technological and technical aspects, and the expected performance of the instruments of the scientific payload; (2) the elements and functions of the mission, from the spacecraft to the ground segment.

102 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the results of an extensive Geant-4 simulation of the Large Area Detector (LAD) are discussed, showing the main contributions to the background and the design solutions for its reduction and control.
Abstract: The Large Observatory For X-ray Timing (LOFT), currently in an assessment phase in the framework the ESA M3 Cosmic Vision programme, is an innovative medium-class mission specifically designed to answer fundamental questions about the behaviour of matter, in the very strong gravitational and magnetic fields around compact objects and in supranuclear density conditions. Having an effective area of ∼10 m2 at 8 keV, LOFT will be able to measure with high sensitivity very fast variability in the X-ray fluxes and spectra. A good knowledge of the in-orbit background environment is essential to assess the scientific performance of the mission and optimize the design of its main instrument, the Large Area Detector (LAD). In this paper the results of an extensive Geant-4 simulation of the instrumentwillbe discussed, showing the main contributions to the background and the design solutions for its reduction and control. Our results show that the current LOFT/LAD design is expected to meet its scientific requirement of a background rate equivalent to 10 mCrab in 2‒30 keV, achieving about 5 mCrab in the most important 2–10 keV energy band. Moreover, simulations show an anticipated modulation of the background rate as small as 10 % over the orbital timescale. The intrinsic photonic origin of the largest background component also allows for an efficient modelling, supported by an in-flight active monitoring, allowing to predict systematic residuals significantly better than the requirement of 1 %, and actually meeting the 0.25 % science goal.

42 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the characteristics of TGFs, including energy spectrum, timing structure, beam geometry and correlation with lightning, and the basic principles of the associated production models.
Abstract: Lightning and thunderstorm systems in general have been recently recognized as powerful particle accelerators, capable of producing electrons, positrons, gamma-rays and neutrons with energies as high as several tens of MeV. In fact, these natural systems turn out to be the highest energy and most efficient natural particle accelerators on Earth. Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes (TGFs) are millisecond long, very intense bursts of gamma-rays and are one of the most intriguing manifestation of these natural accelerators. Only three currently operative missions are capable of detecting TGFs from space: the RHESSI, Fermi and AGILE satellites. In this paper we review the characteristics of TGFs, including energy spectrum, timing structure, beam geometry and correlation with lightning, and the basic principles of the associated production models. Then we focus on the recent AGILE discoveries concerning the high energy extension of the TGF spectrum up to 100 MeV, which is difficult to reconcile with current theoretical models.

34 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the mass and equatorial radius of the millisecond pulsar PSR J0030+0451 were estimated based on a relativistic ray-tracing of thermal emission from hot regions of the pulsar surface.
Abstract: We report on Bayesian parameter estimation of the mass and equatorial radius of the millisecond pulsar PSR J0030+0451, conditional on pulse-profile modeling of Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer X-ray spectral-timing event data. We perform relativistic ray-tracing of thermal emission from hot regions of the pulsar’s surface. We assume two distinct hot regions based on two clear pulsed components in the phase-folded pulse-profile data; we explore a number of forms (morphologies and topologies) for each hot region, inferring their parameters in addition to the stellar mass and radius. For the family of models considered, the evidence (prior predictive probability of the data) strongly favors a model that permits both hot regions to be located in the same rotational hemisphere. Models wherein both hot regions are assumed to be simply connected circular single-temperature spots, in particular those where the spots are assumed to be reflection-symmetric with respect to the stellar origin, are strongly disfavored. For the inferred configuration, one hot region subtends an angular extent of only a few degrees (in spherical coordinates with origin at the stellar center) and we are insensitive to other structural details; the second hot region is far more azimuthally extended in the form of a narrow arc, thus requiring a larger number of parameters to describe. The inferred mass M and equatorial radius R eq are, respectively, and , while the compactness is more tightly constrained; the credible interval bounds reported here are approximately the 16% and 84% quantiles in marginal posterior mass.

737 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the mass and equatorial radius of the millisecond pulsar PSR J0030$+$0451 were estimated from the ICER X-ray spectral-timing event data.
Abstract: We report on Bayesian parameter estimation of the mass and equatorial radius of the millisecond pulsar PSR J0030$+$0451, conditional on pulse-profile modeling of Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) X-ray spectral-timing event data. We perform relativistic ray-tracing of thermal emission from hot regions of the pulsar's surface. We assume two distinct hot regions based on two clear pulsed components in the phase-folded pulse-profile data; we explore a number of forms (morphologies and topologies) for each hot region, inferring their parameters in addition to the stellar mass and radius. For the family of models considered, the evidence (prior predictive probability of the data) strongly favors a model that permits both hot regions to be located in the same rotational hemisphere. Models wherein both hot regions are assumed to be simply-connected circular single-temperature spots, in particular those where the spots are assumed to be reflection-symmetric with respect to the stellar origin, are strongly disfavored. For the inferred configuration, one hot region subtends an angular extent of only a few degrees (in spherical coordinates with origin at the stellar center) and we are insensitive to other structural details; the second hot region is far more azimuthally extended in the form of a narrow arc, thus requiring a larger number of parameters to describe. The inferred mass $M$ and equatorial radius $R_\mathrm{eq}$ are, respectively, $1.34_{-0.16}^{+0.15}$ M$_{\odot}$ and $12.71_{-1.19}^{+1.14}$ km, whilst the compactness $GM/R_\mathrm{eq}c^2 = 0.156_{-0.010}^{+0.008}$ is more tightly constrained; the credible interval bounds reported here are approximately the $16\%$ and $84\%$ quantiles in marginal posterior mass.

541 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Marco Tavani1, Guido Barbiellini2, A. Argan1, F. Boffelli, Andrea Bulgarelli1, P. A. Caraveo1, P. W. Cattaneo, A. W. Chen1, V. Cocco, Enrico Costa1, Filippo D'Ammando1, E. Del Monte1, G. De Paris1, G. Di Cocco1, G. Di Persio1, I. Donnarumma1, Y. Evangelista1, Marco Feroci1, Arnaud Ferrari3, M. Fiorini1, F. Fornari1, F. Fuschino1, T. Froysland, Massimo Frutti1, M. Galli4, Fulvio Gianotti1, A. Giuliani1, Claudio Labanti1, I. Lapshov1, Francesco Lazzarotto1, F. Liello, Paolo Lipari5, Francesco Longo2, E. Mattaini1, Martino Marisaldi1, M. Mastropietro, A. Mauri1, F. Mauri, Sandro Mereghetti1, Ennio Morelli1, A. Morselli, Luigi Pacciani1, A. Pellizzoni1, F. Perotti1, G. Piano1, P. Picozza, C. Pontoni, Geiland Porrovecchio1, M. Prest, G. Pucella1, Massimo Rapisarda4, A. Rappoldi, E. Rossi1, Alda Rubini1, Paolo Soffitta1, Alessandro Traci1, M. Trifoglio1, Alessio Trois1, E. Vallazza, S. Vercellone1, V. Vittorini1, A. Zambra1, D. Zanello5, C. Pittori, B. Preger, P. Santolamazza, F. Verrecchia, P. Giommi, S. Colafrancesco, Angelo Antonelli, S. Cutini, Dario Gasparrini, S. Stellato, G. Fanari, R. Primavera, F. Tamburelli, F. Viola6, G. Guarrera6, L. Salotti6, F. D'Amico6, E. Marchetti6, M. Crisconio6, Paolo Sabatini, G. Annoni, S. Alia, Antonio Francesco Longoni, R. Sanquerin, M. Battilana, P. Concari, E. Dessimone, R. Grossi, A. Parise, F. Monzani7, E. Artina7, R. Pavesi7, G. Marseguerra7, L. Nicolini7, L. Scandelli7, L. Soli7, V. Vettorello7, E. Zardetto7, A. Bonati7, L. Maltecca7, E. D'Alba7, M. Patané7, G. Babini, F. Onorati, L. Acquaroli, M. Angelucci, B. Morelli, C. Agostara, M. Cerone8, A. Michetti8, P. Tempesta8, S. D'Eramo8, F. Rocca8, Franco Giannini8, G. Borghi, B. Garavelli, M. Conte7, M. Balasini7, Ivan Ferrario, M. Vanotti, E. Collavo, M. Giacomazzo 
TL;DR: AGILE as mentioned in this paper is an Italian Space Agency mission dedicated to observing the gamma-ray universe, which was successfully launched on 2007 April 23 from the Indian base of Sriharikota and was inserted in an equatorial orbit with very low particle background.
Abstract: Context. AGILE is an Italian Space Agency mission dedicated to observing the gamma-ray Universe. The AGILE’s very innovative instrumentation for the first time combines a gamma-ray imager (sensitive in the energy range 30 MeV–50 GeV), a hard X-ray imager (sensitive in the range 18–60 keV), a calorimeter (sensitive in the range 350 keV–100 MeV), and an anticoincidence system. AGILE was successfully launched on 2007 April 23 from the Indian base of Sriharikota and was inserted in an equatorial orbit with very low particle background. Aims. AGILE provides crucial data for the study of active galactic nuclei, gamma-ray bursts, pulsars, unidentified gamma-ray sources, galactic compact objects, supernova remnants, TeV sources, and fundamental physics by microsecond timing. Methods. An optimal sky angular positioning (reaching 0.1 degrees in gamma-rays and 1–2 arcmin in hard X-rays) and very large fields of view (2.5 sr and 1 sr, respectively) are obtained by the use of Silicon detectors integrated in a very compact instrument. Results. AGILE surveyed the gamma-ray sky and detected many Galactic and extragalactic sources during the first months of observations. Particular emphasis is given to multifrequency observation programs of extragalactic and galactic objects. Conclusions. AGILE is a successful high-energy gamma-ray mission that reached its nominal scientific performance. The AGILE Cycle-1 pointing program started on 2007 December 1, and is open to the international community through a Guest Observer Program.

379 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the physics of lightning can be found in this article, with the goal of providing interested researchers a useful resource for starting work in this fascinating field, and the recent discoveries of intense bursts of X-rays and gamma-rays associated with thunderstorms and lightning illustrate that new and interesting physics is still being discovered in our atmosphere.

359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimate the radius, mass, and hot surface regions of the massive millisecond pulsar PSR J0740$+$6620, conditional on pulse profile modeling of Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer X-ray Timing Instrument (NICER XTI) event data.
Abstract: We report on Bayesian estimation of the radius, mass, and hot surface regions of the massive millisecond pulsar PSR J0740$+$6620, conditional on pulse-profile modeling of Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer X-ray Timing Instrument (NICER XTI) event data. We condition on informative pulsar mass, distance, and orbital inclination priors derived from the joint NANOGrav and CHIME/Pulsar wideband radio timing measurements of arXiv:2104.00880. We use XMM European Photon Imaging Camera spectroscopic event data to inform our X-ray likelihood function. The prior support of the pulsar radius is truncated at 16 km to ensure coverage of current dense matter models. We assume conservative priors on instrument calibration uncertainty. We constrain the equatorial radius and mass of PSR J0740$+$6620 to be $12.39_{-0.98}^{+1.30}$ km and $2.072_{-0.066}^{+0.067}$ M$_{\odot}$ respectively, each reported as the posterior credible interval bounded by the 16% and 84% quantiles, conditional on surface hot regions that are non-overlapping spherical caps of fully-ionized hydrogen atmosphere with uniform effective temperature; a posteriori, the temperature is $\log_{10}(T$ [K]$)=5.99_{-0.06}^{+0.05}$ for each hot region. All software for the X-ray modeling framework is open-source and all data, model, and sample information is publicly available, including analysis notebooks and model modules in the Python language. Our marginal likelihood function of mass and equatorial radius is proportional to the marginal joint posterior density of those parameters (within the prior support) and can thus be computed from the posterior samples.

353 citations