Osservatorio Astrofisico di TorinoINAF Torino
KELT-20 b is an ultra-hot Jupiter with an equilibrium temperature of 22602260 K orbiting a bright (V =7.6), fast-rotating (vsiniv\sin{i}=117 km s1^{-1}) A2 V star. The atmosphere of KELT-20 b has been studied extensively via transmission spectroscopy at optical wavelengths, showing strong hydrogen absorption as well as metals including Na I, Ca II, Fe I, Fe II, Mg I, Si I and Cr II. The atmospheric and ionization conditions of this planet may differ from Jupiter-mass exoplanets due to the relatively weak extreme-ultraviolet radiation from its host star, as the stellar dynamo that generates chromospheric and coronal activity is thought to shut down at spectral types earlier than A4. We present the first spectroscopic observations of KELT-20 b in the far-ultraviolet using the Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, searching for previously undetected low-ionization and neutral atoms in the upper atmosphere. We find that the FUV transit depth increases with decreasing wavelengths, from 1.88±0.041.88\pm0.04\% at 1600--1760 Å to 2.28±0.042.28\pm0.04\% at 1410--1570 Å, yielding planetary radii of 0.1139±0.060.1139\pm0.06 RR_* and 0.1222±0.070.1222\pm0.07 RR_*, respectively. We report tentative detections of Fe II and N I at 2.4σ2.4\sigma each, and non-detections of C I, S I, Al II, and Si II. We find no evidence for molecular absorption from CO or H2_2 and no sign of hydrodynamic escape.
We present results of searches for vector and pseudo-scalar bosonic super-WIMPs, which are dark matter candidates with masses at the keV-scale, with the XENON100 experiment. XENON100 is a dual-phase xenon time projection chamber operated at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso. A profile likelihood analysis of data with an exposure of 224.6 live days ×\times 34\,kg showed no evidence for a signal above the expected background. We thus obtain new and stringent upper limits in the (8125)(8-125)\,keV/c2^2 mass range, excluding couplings to electrons with coupling constants of $g_{ae} > 3\times10^{-13}forpseudoscalarand for pseudo-scalar and \alpha'/\alpha > 2\times10^{-28}$ for vector super-WIMPs, respectively. These limits are derived under the assumption that super-WIMPs constitute all of the dark matter in our galaxy.
University of New South WalesUniversity of Cambridge logoUniversity of CambridgeNational Astronomical Observatory of JapanUniversité de Montréal logoUniversité de MontréalUniversity of BernUniversity of Oxford logoUniversity of OxfordUniversity of EdinburghETH Zürich logoETH ZürichTexas A&M University logoTexas A&M UniversityUniversity of British Columbia logoUniversity of British ColumbiaYale University logoYale UniversityUniversidade de LisboaTechnische Universität DresdenKU Leuven logoKU LeuvenAarhus UniversityUniversity of ExeterUniversity of Southern QueenslandStockholm University logoStockholm UniversityUniversité de GenèveSorbonne Université logoSorbonne UniversitéAustralian National University logoAustralian National UniversityLeiden University logoLeiden UniversityUniversity of Sydney logoUniversity of SydneyQueen Mary University of London logoQueen Mary University of LondonUniversity of ViennaUniversity of Warwick logoUniversity of WarwickTrinity College DublinUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulUniversity of LeicesterUniversity of St Andrews logoUniversity of St AndrewsUniversidade do PortoUniversidad de ExtremaduraObservatoire de ParisUniversité de LiègeINAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di TorinoUniversité Côte d’AzurUniversity of BirminghamUniversidade Federal de Minas GeraisUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do NorteUniversity of LiègeUniversidade de São PauloUniversity of Central LancashireAstronomical Institute of the Czech Academy of SciencesUniversität InnsbruckShanghai Astronomical ObservatoryBahrain PolytechnicUniversity of Western OntarioObservatoire de la Côte d’AzurNiels Bohr Institute, University of CopenhagenDeutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)Universidad de AtacamaUniversité de Franche-ComtéInstituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, IAA-CSICUniversidad de JaénINAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di RomaInstituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC)Università degli Studi di Roma "Tor Vergata"Max-Planck-Institut für SonnensystemforschungSRON Netherlands Institute for Space ResearchINAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di CataniaUniversidade do MinhoINAF- Osservatorio Astronomico di CagliariLeibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam (AIP)Space Research InstituteUniversidade de CoimbraInstitut d’Astrophysique SpatialeInstituto de Astrofísica e Ciências do Espaço, Universidade do PortoEuropean Space Agency (ESA)INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di PalermoOsservatorio Astrofisico di TorinoInstituto de Astrofísica e Ciências do Espaço, Universidade de LisboaINAF - Fundación Galileo Galilei (TNG)Millennium Institute of Astrophysics, Universidad CatolicaUniversit de ToulouseAix-Marseille Universit",Universit de BordeauxRuhr-University-BochumUniversit di PisaUniversit di PadovaINAF Osservatorio Astrofisico di ArcetriINAF Osservatorio Astronomico di PadovaUniversit degli Studi di Napoli Federico IIINAF Osservatorio di Astrofisica e Scienza dello Spazio di BolognaUniversit degli Studi di TriesteINAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
PLATO (PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars) is ESA's M3 mission designed to detect and characterise extrasolar planets and perform asteroseismic monitoring of a large number of stars. PLATO will detect small planets (down to <2 R_(Earth)) around bright stars (<11 mag), including terrestrial planets in the habitable zone of solar-like stars. With the complement of radial velocity observations from the ground, planets will be characterised for their radius, mass, and age with high accuracy (5 %, 10 %, 10 % for an Earth-Sun combination respectively). PLATO will provide us with a large-scale catalogue of well-characterised small planets up to intermediate orbital periods, relevant for a meaningful comparison to planet formation theories and to better understand planet evolution. It will make possible comparative exoplanetology to place our Solar System planets in a broader context. In parallel, PLATO will study (host) stars using asteroseismology, allowing us to determine the stellar properties with high accuracy, substantially enhancing our knowledge of stellar structure and evolution. The payload instrument consists of 26 cameras with 12cm aperture each. For at least four years, the mission will perform high-precision photometric measurements. Here we review the science objectives, present PLATO's target samples and fields, provide an overview of expected core science performance as well as a description of the instrument and the mission profile at the beginning of the serial production of the flight cameras. PLATO is scheduled for a launch date end 2026. This overview therefore provides a summary of the mission to the community in preparation of the upcoming operational phases.
CNRS logoCNRSMichigan State University logoMichigan State UniversityINFN Sezione di NapoliSLAC National Accelerator LaboratoryUniversity of UtahChinese Academy of Sciences logoChinese Academy of SciencesDESYNanjing University logoNanjing UniversityUniversity of WarsawPennsylvania State UniversityCONICETUniversidade de LisboaUniversity of Maryland logoUniversity of MarylandUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison logoUniversity of Wisconsin-MadisonLos Alamos National LaboratoryFriedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-NürnbergUniversity of ZagrebUniversity of RochesterCEA logoCEAShandong University logoShandong UniversityInstitut Universitaire de FranceChung-Ang UniversityYunnan UniversityInstitute for Basic ScienceUniversidade Estadual de CampinasUniversidade Federal do ABCUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulUniversity of LeicesterUniversidad Nacional de La PlataDurham University logoDurham UniversityUniversidad de Santiago de ChileCentro Brasileiro de Pesquisas FísicasUniversidad Nacional Autónoma de MéxicoMichigan Technological UniversityInstitute of Physics of the Czech Academy of SciencesUniversidade de São PauloUniversity of AlabamaUniversidad de TalcaRuhr-Universität BochumLaboratoire d’Astrophysique de BordeauxINFN, Sezione di TorinoPontificia Universidad Católica de ChileUniversidad de ValparaísoUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaPontificia Universidad Católica de ValparaísoWashington UniversityINFN, Laboratori Nazionali di FrascatiUniversità di Napoli Federico IIINFN, Sezione di MilanoUniversidad Adolfo IbáñezUniversidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de HidalgoUniversidade Federal de São PauloINFN - Sezione di PadovaMax-Planck-Institut für KernphysikUniversitá degli Studi dell’InsubriaUniversidad Andres BelloInstituto Politécnico NacionalUniversidade Federal de ItajubáINFN-Sezione di GenovaUniversidad de GuanajuatoUniversiteit AntwerpenUniversidad MayorHubei Normal UniversityINAF/IAPSUniversidade Federal de Juiz de ForaINFN Sezione di Roma Tor VergataUniversidad Tecnológica NacionalUniversidad Autónoma de ChiapasOsservatorio Astrofisico di TorinoUniversidad Autónoma de CoahuilaInstituto Politécnico de SetúbalUniversidad Nacional de IngenieríaInstituto de Física La Plata (IFLP)Universidad Tecnológica MetropolitanaUniversidad Peruana Cayetano HerediaLIP - Laboratório de Instrumentação e Física Experimental de PartículasInstituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia do Rio de JaneiroINFN, CNAFYunnan Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of SciencesINFN (Sezione di Bari)Instituto Argentino de Radioastronomía (IAR)Universidad de la Sierra JuárezUniversit di SalernoUniversit Paris CitRWTH Aachen UniversityUniversit di PadovaUniversit degli Studi di MilanoUniversit degli Studi di TorinoUniversit di Roma Tor VergataUniversit degli Studi di Trieste
Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy is now well established as a key observational approach to address critical topics at the frontiers of astroparticle physics and high-energy astrophysics. Whilst the field of TeV astronomy was once dominated by arrays of atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes, ground-level particle detection has now been demonstrated to be an equally viable and strongly complementary approach. Ground-level particle detection provides continuous monitoring of the overhead sky, critical for the mapping of extended structures and capturing transient phenomena. As demonstrated by HAWC and LHAASO, the technique provides the best available sensitivity above a few tens of TeV, and for the first time access to the PeV energy range. Despite the success of this approach, there is so far no major ground-level particle-based observatory with access to the Southern sky. HESS, located in Namibia, is the only major gamma-ray instrument in the Southern Hemisphere, and has shown the extraordinary richness of the inner galaxy in the TeV band, but is limited in terms of field of view and energy reach. SWGO is an international effort to construct the first wide-field instrument in the south with deep sensitivity from 100s of GeV into the PeV domain. The project is now close to the end of its development phase and planning for construction of the array in Chile has begun. Here we describe the baseline design, expected sensitivity and resolution, and describe in detail the main scientific topics that will be addressed by this new facility and its initial phase SWGO-A. We show that SWGO will have a transformational impact on a wide range of topics from cosmic-ray acceleration and transport to the nature of dark matter. SWGO represents a key piece of infrastructure for multi-messenger astronomy in the next decade, with strong scientific synergies with the nearby CTA Observatory.
Using the astrometry and integrated photometry from the Gaia Early Data Release 3 (EDR3), we map the density variations in the distribution of young Upper Main Sequence (UMS) stars, open clusters and classical Cepheids in the Galactic disk within several kiloparsecs of the Sun. Maps of relative over/under-dense regions for UMS stars in the Galactic disk are derived, using both bivariate kernel density estimators and wavelet transformations. The resulting overdensity maps exhibit large-scale arches, that extend in a clumpy but coherent way over the entire sampled volume, indicating the location of the spiral arms segments in the vicinity of the Sun. Peaks in the UMS overdensity are well-matched by the distribution of young and intrinsically bright open clusters. By applying a wavelet transformation to a sample of classical Cepheids, we find that their overdensities possibly extend the spiral arm segments on a larger scale (~10 kpc from the Sun). While the resulting map based on the UMS sample is generally consistent with previous models of the Sagittarius-Carina spiral arm, the geometry of the arms in the III quadrant (galactic longitudes 180^\circ &lt; l &lt; 270^\circ) differs significantly from many previous models. In particular we find that our maps favour a larger pitch angle for the Perseus arm, and that the Local Arm extends into the III quadrant at least 4 kpc past the Sun's position, giving it a total length of at least 8 kpc.
The evolution of the muon content of very high energy air showers (EAS) in the atmosphere is investigated with data of the KASCADE-Grande observatory. For this purpose, the muon attenuation length in the atmosphere is obtained to Λμ=1256±85232+229(\mboxsyst)\mboxg/cm2\Lambda_\mu = 1256 \, \pm 85 \, ^{+229}_{-232}(\mbox{syst})\, \mbox{g/cm}^2 from the experimental data for shower energies between 1016.310^{16.3} and 1017.0\mboxeV10^{17.0} \, \mbox{eV}. Comparison of this quantity with predictions of the high-energy hadronic interaction models QGSJET-II-02, SIBYLL 2.1, QGSJET-II-04 and EPOS-LHC reveals that the attenuation of the muon content of measured EAS in the atmosphere is lower than predicted. Deviations are, however, less significant with the post-LHC models. The presence of such deviations seems to be related to a difference between the simulated and the measured zenith angle evolutions of the lateral muon density distributions of EAS, which also causes a discrepancy between the measured absorption lengths of the density of shower muons and the predicted ones at large distances from the EAS core. The studied deficiencies show that all four considered hadronic interaction models fail to describe consistently the zenith angle evolution of the muon content of EAS in the aforesaid energy regime.
The `KASCADE Cosmic ray Data Centre' is a web portal (\url{this https URL}), where the data of the astroparticle physics experiment KASCADE-Grande are made available for the interested public. The KASCADE experiment was a large-area detector for the measurement of high-energy cosmic rays via the detection of extensive air showers. The multi-detector installations KASCADE and its extension KASCADE-Grande stopped the active data acquisition in 2013 of all its components end of 2012 after more than 20 years of data taking. In several updates since our first release in 2013 with KCDC we provide the public measured and reconstructed parameters of more than 433 million air showers. In addition, KCDC provides meta data information and documentation to enable a user outside the community of experts to perform their own data analysis. Simulation data from three different high energy interaction models have been made available as well as a compilation of measured and published spectra from various experiments. In addition, detailed educational examples shall encourage high-school students and early stage researchers to learn about astroparticle physics, cosmic radiation as well as the handling of Big Data and about the sustainable and public provision of scientific data.
Doppler Imaging (DI) is a well-established technique to map a physical field at a stellar surface from a time series of high-resolution spectra. In this proof-of-concept study, we aim to show that traditional DI algorithms, originally designed for rapidly-rotating stars, have also the ability to model the activity of Sun-like stars, when observed with new-generation highly-stable spectrographs, and search for low-mass planets around them. We used DI to retrieve the relative brightness distribution at the surface of the Sun from radial velocity (RV) observations collected by HARPS-N between 2022 and 2024. The brightness maps obtained with DI have a typical angular resolution of about 36 degrees and are a good match to low-resolution disc-resolved Dopplergrams of the Sun at epochs when the absolute, disc-integrated RV exceeds ~2 m/s. The RV residuals after DI correction exhibit a dispersion of about 0.6 m/s, comparable with existing state-of-the-art activity correction techniques. Using planet injection-recovery tests, we also show that DI can be a powerful tool for blind planet searches, so long as the orbital period is larger than ~100days (i.e. 3 to 4 stellar rotation periods), and that it yields planetary mass estimates with an accuracy comparable to, for example, multi-dimensional Gaussian process regression. Finally, we highlight some limitations of traditional DI algorithms, which should be addressed to make DI a reliable alternative to state-of-the-art RV-based planet search techniques.
We report the first experimental results on spin-dependent elastic weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) nucleon scattering from the XENON1T dark matter search experiment. The analysis uses the full ton year exposure of XENON1T to constrain the spin-dependent proton-only and neutron-only cases. No significant signal excess is observed, and a profile likelihood ratio analysis is used to set exclusion limits on the WIMP-nucleon interactions. This includes the most stringent constraint to date on the WIMP-neutron cross section, with a minimum of 6.3×10426.3\times10^{-42} cm2^2 at 30 GeV/c2{}^2 and 90% confidence level. The results are compared with those from collider searches and used to exclude new parameter space in an isoscalar theory with an axial-vector mediator.
University of UtahNew York University logoNew York UniversityUniversity of Chicago logoUniversity of ChicagoNikhefUniversity of LjubljanaTU Dortmund UniversityOhio State UniversityUniversit‘a di Napoli Federico IIUniversidad de GranadaColorado State UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison logoUniversity of Wisconsin-MadisonCase Western Reserve UniversityFermi National Accelerator LaboratoryUniversidade Estadual de CampinasUniversidade Federal do ABCUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulUniversity of DelawareUniversidad Complutense de MadridIowa State UniversityKarlsruhe Institute of Technology logoKarlsruhe Institute of TechnologyObservatoire de ParisUniversity of New MexicoUniversidade Federal do Rio de JaneiroUniversity of Groningen logoUniversity of GroningenMichigan Technological UniversityInstitute of Physics of the Czech Academy of SciencesJozef Stefan InstituteLehman College, City University of New YorkUniversity of AdelaideINFN, Sezione di TorinoUniversity of Hawai’iUniversity of WuppertalRadboud University NijmegenUniversidade de Sao PauloUniversity of Nebraska-LincolnUniversidad Industrial de SantanderCharles University PragueSouth Dakota School of Mines and TechnologyINFN MilanoUniversidad de Santiago de CompostelaINFN “Roma Tor Vergata"INFN-LecceMax-Planck Institut fur RadioastronomieKarlsruher Institut fur TechnologieUniversidad del NortePalacky University OlomoucUniversidade Estadual de Feira de SantanaSorbonne Universit\'e, CNRSUniversidade Federal de PelotasEberhard Karls Universit ̈at T ̈ubingenOsservatorio Astrofisico di TorinoINFN-CataniaUniversity of Wisconsin-River FallsLaboratoire Leprince-Ringuet (LLR)Universit´e Paris-Saclay, CNRSCentro Brasileiro de Pesquisas F ́ısicas (CBPF)IFLP, Universidad Nacional de La PlataIFGW, Universidade Estadual de CampinasInstituto de F ́ısica de Rosario (IFIR)Laborat ́orio de Instrumentac ̧ao e F ́ısica Experimental de Part ́ıculas - LIPSubatech, NantesNational Institute for Earth PhysicsICIFICEN, Buenos AiresINFN - L’AquilaUniversidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de HidalgoDepartamento de F ́ısica, FCEyN, Universidad de Buenos AiresUniversidad Nacional de Tucum ́anUniversidad de MedellinCase Western Reserve University, ClevelandInstitute of Nuclear Physics PAN, KrakowNuclear Physics Institute AS CR, RezISS, BucharestUniversidade Estadual de Campinas, Sao PauloUniversidad Nacional de San Mart ́ınUniversidad Autonoma del Estado de HidalgoUniversidade de Sao Paulo, Instituto de F ́ısicaUniversity of Chicago, Enrico Fermi InstituteUniversity and INFN, SalernoInstitute for Space Sciences, MagureleUniversity ”Politehnica” of BucharestUniversidad Tecnoĺogica NacionalUniversita di Roma IIBergische Universit  at WuppertalUniversit at HamburgUniversidad de AlcaláUniversité Paris-SaclayRWTH Aachen UniversityRuhr-University-BochumUniversidad Nacional Aut {' '}onoma de M {' '}exicoCentro At ómico Bariloche“Horia Hulubei ” National Institute for Physics and Nuclear EngineeringUniversita' degli Studi di Torino
We measure the energy emitted by extensive air showers in the form of radio emission in the frequency range from 30 to 80 MHz. Exploiting the accurate energy scale of the Pierre Auger Observatory, we obtain a radiation energy of 15.8 \pm 0.7 (stat) \pm 6.7 (sys) MeV for cosmic rays with an energy of 1 EeV arriving perpendicularly to a geomagnetic field of 0.24 G, scaling quadratically with the cosmic-ray energy. A comparison with predictions from state-of-the-art first-principle calculations shows agreement with our measurement. The radiation energy provides direct access to the calorimetric energy in the electromagnetic cascade of extensive air showers. Comparison with our result thus allows the direct calibration of any cosmic-ray radio detector against the well-established energy scale of the Pierre Auger Observatory.
We present the first results of searches for axions and axion-like-particles with the XENON100 experiment. The axion-electron coupling constant, gAeg_{Ae}, has been probed by exploiting the axio-electric effect in liquid xenon. A profile likelihood analysis of 224.6 live days ×\times 34 kg exposure has shown no evidence for a signal. By rejecting gAeg_{Ae}, larger than $7.7 \times 10^{-12}$ (90\% CL) in the solar axion search, we set the best limit to date on this coupling. In the frame of the DFSZ and KSVZ models, we exclude QCD axions heavier than 0.3 eV/c2^2 and 80 eV/c2^2, respectively. For axion-like-particles, under the assumption that they constitute the whole abundance of dark matter in our galaxy, we constrain gAeg_{Ae}, to be lower than 1×10121 \times 10^{-12} (90\% CL) for mass range from 1 to 40 keV/c2^2, and set the best limit to date as well.
We have searched for periodic variations of the electronic recoil event rate in the (2-6) keV energy range recorded between February 2011 and March 2012 with the XENON100 detector, adding up to 224.6 live days in total. Following a detailed study to establish the stability of the detector and its background contributions during this run, we performed an un-binned profile likelihood analysis to identify any periodicity up to 500 days. We find a global significance of less than 1 sigma for all periods suggesting no statistically significant modulation in the data. While the local significance for an annual modulation is 2.8 sigma, the analysis of a multiple-scatter control sample and the phase of the modulation disfavor a dark matter interpretation. The DAMA/LIBRA annual modulation interpreted as a dark matter signature with axial-vector coupling of WIMPs to electrons is excluded at 4.8 sigma.
University of Amsterdam logoUniversity of AmsterdamCalifornia Institute of Technology logoCalifornia Institute of TechnologyUniversity of OsloUniversity of Southern California logoUniversity of Southern CaliforniaUniversity of Oxford logoUniversity of OxfordUniversity of Science and Technology of China logoUniversity of Science and Technology of ChinaUniversity of California, Irvine logoUniversity of California, IrvineThe University of EdinburghETH Zürich logoETH ZürichNASA Goddard Space Flight Center logoNASA Goddard Space Flight CenterUniversité Paris-Saclay logoUniversité Paris-SaclayStockholm University logoStockholm UniversityUniversity of HelsinkiUniversité de GenèveLeiden University logoLeiden UniversityUniversity of GenevaUniversity of PortsmouthUniversity of SussexObservatoire de ParisUniversità di TriesteINAFNiels Bohr InstituteUniversity of JyväskyläJet Propulsion LaboratoryInstituto de Astrofísica de CanariasUniversity of NottinghamEuropean Space AgencyRuđer Bošković InstituteSISSAPontificia Universidad Católica de ChileUniversité de Picardie Jules VerneUniversidad de CantabriaUniversità di Napoli Federico IIUniversity of Hawai’iUniversity of KwaZulu-NatalLudwig-Maximilians-UniversitätUniversity of the Western CapeNational Observatory of AthensINAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di RomaUniversity of LyonInstitut d'Astrophysique de ParisInstitut d’Estudis Espacials de Catalunya (IEEC)Institut de Physique des 2 Infinis de LyonINAF-IASF MilanoInstitut d’Astrophysique SpatialeAix Marseille Université, CNRS, CNES, LAMDTU SpaceCENTRA, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de LisboaInfrared Processing and Analysis CenterUniversità degli Studi di Roma TreOsservatorio Astrofisico di TorinoUniversidade de Lisboa - Faculdade de CiênciasUniversité Paris Cité, CNRSService d’Astrophysique, CEA Paris-SaclayESACUKATCDipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di BolognaUniversité Paris-Saclay, CNRSUniversité de NiceCosmostatUniversitatea “Alexandru Ioan Cuza” din IasiUniversité Côte d’Azur, Observatoire de la Côte d’AzurUniversit degli Studi di FerraraUniversit de ParisUniversit Claude Bernard Lyon 1Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics The University of ManchesterMax Planck Institut fr AstronomieUniversit Savoie Mont BlancUniversit de StrasbourgUniversit de SavoieRWTH Aachen UniversityUniversit di PadovaINAF Osservatorio Astrofisico di ArcetriINAF Osservatorio Astronomico di PadovaUniversit degli Studi di FirenzeUniversit de MontpellierINAF Osservatorio di Astrofisica e Scienza dello Spazio di BolognaUniversit Di BolognaIFPU Institute for fundamental physics of the UniverseINAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
This paper describes the near-infrared processing function (NIR PF) that processes near-infrared images from the Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP) instrument onboard the Euclid satellite. NIR PF consists of three main components: (i) a common pre-processing stage for both photometric (NIR) and spectroscopic (SIR) data to remove instrumental effects; (ii) astrometric and photometric calibration of NIR data, along with catalogue extraction; and (iii) resampling and stacking. The necessary calibration products are generated using dedicated pipelines that process observations from both the early performance verification (PV) phase in 2023 and the nominal survey operations. After outlining the pipeline's structure and algorithms, we demonstrate its application to Euclid Q1 images. For Q1, we achieve an astrometric accuracy of 9-15 mas, a relative photometric accuracy of 5 mmag, and an absolute flux calibration limited by the 1% uncertainty of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) CALSPEC database. We characterise the point-spread function (PSF) that we find very stable across the focal plane, and we discuss current limitations of NIR PF that will be improved upon for future data releases.
Two prized papers, one by Augustin Cauchy in 1815, presented to the French Academy and the other by Hermann Hankel in 1861, presented to G\"ottingen University, contain major discoveries on vorticity dynamics whose impact is now quickly increasing. Cauchy found a Lagrangian formulation of 3D ideal incompressible flow in terms of three invariants that generalize to three dimensions the now well-known law of conservation of vorticity along fluid particle trajectories for two-dimensional flow. This has very recently been used to prove analyticity in time of fluid particle trajectories for 3D incompressible Euler flow and can be extended to compressible flow, in particular to cosmological dark matter. Hankel showed that Cauchy's formulation gives a very simple Lagrangian derivation of the Helmholtz vorticity-flux invariants and, in the middle of the proof, derived an intermediate result which is the conservation of the circulation of the velocity around a closed contour moving with the fluid. This circulation theorem was to be rediscovered independently by William Thomson (Kelvin) in 1869. Cauchy's invariants were only occasionally cited in the 19th century --- besides Hankel, foremost by George Stokes and Maurice L\'evy --- and even less so in the 20th until they were rediscovered via Emmy Noether's theorem in the late 1960, but reattributed to Cauchy only at the end of the 20th century by Russian scientists.
The XENON1T liquid xenon time projection chamber is the most sensitive detector built to date for the measurement of direct interactions of weakly interacting massive particles with normal matter. The data acquisition system (DAQ) is constructed from commercial, open source, and custom components to digitize signals from the detector and store them for later analysis. The system achieves an extremely low signal threshold below a tenth of a photoelectron using a parallelized readout with the global trigger deferred to a later, software stage. The event identification is based on MongoDB database queries and has over 97% efficiency at recognizing interactions at the analysis energy threshold. A readout bandwidth over 300 MB/s is reached in calibration modes and is further expandable via parallelization. This DAQ system was successfully used during three years of operation of XENON1T.
The XENON1T experiment searches for dark matter particles through their scattering off xenon atoms in a 2 tonne liquid xenon target. The detector is a dual-phase time projection chamber, which measures simultaneously the scintillation and ionization signals produced by interactions in target volume, to reconstruct energy and position, as well as the type of the interaction. The background rate in the central volume of XENON1T detector is the lowest achieved so far with a liquid xenon-based direct detection experiment. In this work we describe the response model of the detector, the background and signal models, and the statistical inference procedures used in the dark matter searches with a 1 tonne×\timesyear exposure of XENON1T data, that leaded to the best limit to date on WIMP-nucleon spin-independent elastic scatter cross-section for WIMP masses above 6 GeV/c2^2.
Laboratory experiments searching for galactic dark matter particles scattering off nuclei have so far not been able to establish a discovery. We use data from the XENON100 experiment to search for dark matter interacting with electrons. With no evidence for a signal above the low background of our experiment, we exclude a variety of representative dark matter models that would induce electronic recoils. For axial-vector couplings to electrons, we exclude cross-sections above 6x10^(-35) cm^2 for particle masses of m_chi = 2 GeV/c^2. Independent of the dark matter halo, we exclude leptophilic models as explanation for the long-standing DAMA/LIBRA signal, such as couplings to electrons through axial-vector interactions at a 4.4 sigma confidence level, mirror dark matter at 3.6 sigma, and luminous dark matter at 4.6 sigma.
The ESA Euclid space telescope could observe up to 150 000 asteroids as a side product of its primary cosmological mission. Asteroids appear as trailed sources, that is streaks, in the images. Owing to the survey area of 15 000 square degrees and the number of sources, automated methods have to be used to find them. Euclid is equipped with a visible camera, VIS (VISual imager), and a near-infrared camera, NISP (Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer), with three filters. We aim to develop a pipeline to detect fast-moving objects in Euclid images, with both high completeness and high purity. We tested the StreakDet software to find asteroids from simulated Euclid images. We optimized the parameters of StreakDet to maximize completeness, and developed a post-processing algorithm to improve the purity of the sample of detected sources by removing false-positive detections. StreakDet finds 96.9% of the synthetic asteroid streaks with apparent magnitudes brighter than 23rd magnitude and streak lengths longer than 15 pixels (10arcsech110\,{\rm arcsec\,h^{-1}}), but this comes at the cost of finding a high number of false positives. The number of false positives can be radically reduced with multi-streak analysis, which utilizes all four dithers obtained by Euclid. StreakDet is a good tool for identifying asteroids in Euclid images, but there is still room for improvement, in particular, for finding short (less than 13 pixels, corresponding to 8arcsech1\,{\rm arcsec\,h^{-1}}) and/or faint streaks (fainter than the apparent magnitude of 23).
The XENON1T experiment aims for the direct detection of dark matter in a cryostat filled with 3.3 tons of liquid xenon. In order to achieve the desired sensitivity, the background induced by radioactive decays inside the detector has to be sufficiently low. One major contributor is the β\beta-emitter 85^{85}Kr which is an intrinsic contamination of the xenon. For the XENON1T experiment a concentration of natural krypton in xenon nat\rm{^{nat}}Kr/Xe < 200 ppq (parts per quadrillion, 1 ppq = 1015^{-15} mol/mol) is required. In this work, the design of a novel cryogenic distillation column using the common McCabe-Thiele approach is described. The system demonstrated a krypton reduction factor of 6.4\cdot105^5 with thermodynamic stability at process speeds above 3 kg/h. The resulting concentration of nat\rm{^{nat}}Kr/Xe < 26 ppq is the lowest ever achieved, almost one order of magnitude below the requirements for XENON1T and even sufficient for future dark matter experiments using liquid xenon, such as XENONnT and DARWIN.
Current theories of planetary evolution predict that infant giant planets have large radii and very low densities before they slowly contract to reach their final size after about several hundred million years. These theoretical expectations remain untested to date, despite the increasing number of exoplanetary discoveries, as the detection and characterisation of very young planets is extremely challenging due to the intense stellar activity of their host stars. However, the recent discoveries of young planetary transiting systems allow to place initial constraints on evolutionary models. With an estimated age of 20 million years, V1298\,Tau is one of the youngest solar-type stars known to host transiting planets: it harbours a multiple system composed of two Neptune-sized, one Saturn-sized, and one Jupiter-sized planets. Here we report the analysis of an intense radial velocity campaign, revealing the presence of two periodic signals compatible with the orbits of two of its planets. We find that planet b, with an orbital period of 24 days, has a mass of 0.64 Jupiter masses and a density similar to the giant planets of the Solar System and other known giant exoplanets with significantly older ages. Planet e, with an orbital period of 40 days, has a mass of 1.16 Jupiter masses and a density larger than most giant exoplanets. This is unexpected for planets at such a young age and suggests that some giant planets might evolve and contract faster than anticipated, thus challenging current models of planetary evolution.
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