55 research outputs found
Volcanoes muon imaging using Cherenkov telescopes
A detailed understanding of a volcano inner structure is one of the
key-points for the volcanic hazards evaluation. To this aim, in the last
decade, geophysical radiography techniques using cosmic muon particles have
been proposed. By measuring the differential attenuation of the muon flux as a
function of the amount of rock crossed along different directions, it is
possible to determine the density distribution of the interior of a volcano. Up
to now, a number of experiments have been based on the detection of the muon
tracks crossing hodoscopes, made up of scintillators or nuclear emulsion
planes. Using telescopes based on the atmospheric Cherenkov imaging technique,
we propose a new approach to study the interior of volcanoes detecting the
Cherenkov light produced by relativistic cosmic-ray muons that survive after
crossing the volcano. The Cherenkov light produced along the muon path is
imaged as a typical annular pattern containing all the essential information to
reconstruct particle direction and energy. Our new approach offers the
advantage of a negligible background and an improved spatial resolution. To
test the feasibility of our new method, we have carried out simulations with a
toy-model based on the geometrical parameters of ASTRI SST-2M, i.e. the imaging
atmospheric Cherenkov telescope currently under installation onto the Etna
volcano. Comparing the results of our simulations with previous experiments
based on particle detectors, we gain at least a factor of 10 in sensitivity.
The result of this study shows that we resolve an empty cylinder with a radius
of about 100 m located inside a volcano in less than 4 days, which implies a
limit on the magma velocity of 5 m/h.Comment: 21 pages, 21 figures, in press on Nuclear Inst. and Methods in
Physics Research, A. Final version published online: 3-NOV-201
Broad-band spectral analysis of the accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar SAX J1748.9-2021
We analyzed a 115 ks XMM-Newton observation and the stacking of 8 days of
INTEGRAL observations, taken during the raise of the 2015 outburst of the
accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar SAX J1748.9-2021. The source showed numerous
type-I burst episodes during the XMM-Newton observation, and for this reason we
studied separately the persistent and burst epochs. We described the persistent
emission with a combination of two soft thermal components, a cold thermal
Comptonization component (~2 keV) and an additional hard X-ray emission
described by a power-law (photon index ~2.3). The continuum components can be
associated with an accretion disc, the neutron star (NS) surface and a thermal
Comptonization emission coming out of an optically thick plasma region, while
the origin of the high energy tail is still under debate. In addition, a number
of broad (~0.1-0.4 keV) emission features likely associated to reflection
processes have been observed in the XMM-Newton data. The estimated 1.0-50 keV
unabsorbed luminosity of the source is ~5x10^37 erg/s, about 25% of the
Eddington limit assuming a 1.4 solar mass NS. We suggest that the spectral
properties of SAX J1748.9-2021 are consistent with a soft state, differently
from many other accreting X-ray millisecond pulsars which are usually found in
the hard state. Moreover, none of the observed type-I burst reached the
Eddington luminosity. Assuming that the burst ignition and emission are
produced above the whole NS surface, we estimate a neutron star radius of ~7-8
km, consistent with previous results.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 12 pages, 9 figures, 2 table
The puzzling source IGR J17361-4441 in NGC 6388: a possible planetary tidal disruption event
On 2011 August 11, INTEGRAL discovered the hard X-ray source IGR J17361-4441
near the centre of the globular cluster NGC 6388. Follow up observations with
Chandra showed the position of the transient was inconsistent with the cluster
dynamical centre, and thus not related to its possible intermediate mass black
hole. The source showed a peculiar hard spectrum (Gamma \approx 0.8) and no
evidence of QPOs, pulsations, type-I bursts, or radio emission. Based on its
peak luminosity, IGR J17361-4441 was classified as a very faint X-ray
transient, and most likely a low-mass X-ray binary. We re-analysed 200 days of
Swift/XRT observations, covering the whole outburst of IGR J17361-4441 and find
a t^{-5/3} trend evident in the light curve, and a thermal emission component
that does not evolve significantly with time. We investigate whether this
source could be a tidal disruption event, and for certain assumptions find an
accretion efficiency epsilon \approx 3.5E-04 (M_{Ch}/M) consistent with a
massive white dwarf, and a disrupted minor body mass M_{mb}=1.9E+27(M/M_{Ch}) g
in the terrestrial-icy planet regime. These numbers yield an inner disc
temperature of the order kT_{in} \approx 0.04 keV, consistent with the
blackbody temperature of kT_{in} \approx 0.08 keV estimated by spectral
fitting. Although the density of white dwarfs and the number of free-floating
planets are uncertain, we estimate the rate of planetary tidal disruptions in
NGC 6388 to be in the range 3E-06 to 3E-04 yr^{-1}. Averaged over the Milky Way
globular clusters, the upper limit value corresponds to 0.05 yr^{-1},
consistent with the observation of a single event by INTEGRAL and Swift.Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society Main Journal on 2014 July 16; 9 pages, 5 figures. Added references;
corrected typo
Disk precession to explain the super-orbital modulation of LMC X-4: results from the Swift monitoring campaign
We studied the spectral changes of the high-mass X-ray binary system LMC X-4
to understand the origin and mechanisms beyond its super-orbital modulation
(30.4 days). To this aim, we obtained a monitoring campaign with Swift/XRT
(0.3-10 keV) and complemented these data with the years-long Swift/BAT survey
data (15-60 keV). We found a self-consistent, physically motivated, description
of the broadband X-ray spectrum using a Swift/XRT and a NuSTAR observation at
the epoch of maximum flux. We decomposed the spectrum into the sum of a
bulk+thermal Comptonization, a disk-reflection component and a soft
contribution from a standard Shakura-Sunyaev accretion disk. We applied this
model to 20 phase-selected Swift spectra along the super-orbital period. We
found a phase-dependent flux ratio of the different components, whereas the
absorption column does not significantly vary. The disk emission is decoupled
with respect to the hard flux. We interpret this as a geometrical effect in
which the inner parts of the disk are tilted with respect to the obscuring
outer regions.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Sub-luminous X-ray Bursters Unveiled with INTEGRAL
In 2005 March 22nd, the INTEGRAL satellite caught a type-I X-ray burst from
the unidentified source XMMU J174716.1-281048, serendipitously discovered with
XMM-Newton in 2003. Based on the type-I X-ray burst properties, we derived the
distance of the object and suggested that the system is undergoing a prolonged
accretion episode of many years. We present new data from a Swift/XRT campaign
which strengthen this suggestion. AX J1754.2-2754 was an unclassified source
reported in the ASCA catalogue of the Galactic Centre survey. INTEGRAL observed
a type-I burst from it in 2005, April 16th. Recently, a Swift ToO allowed us to
refine the source position and establish its persistent nature.Comment: To be published in AIP Proceedings - Conference 'A Population
Explosion: The Nature and Evolution of X-ray Binaries in Diverse
Environments', 28 Oct - 2 Nov, St. Petersburg Beach, F
The possibilities of Cherenkov telescopes to perform cosmic-ray muon imaging of volcanoes
Volcanic activity is regulated by the interaction of gas-liquid flow with conduit geometry. Hence, the quantitative understanding of the inner shallow structure of a volcano is mandatory to forecast the occurrence of dangerous stages of activity and mitigate volcanic hazards. Among the techniques used to investigate the underground structure of a volcano, muon imaging offers some advantages, as it provides a fine spatial resolution, and does not require neither spatially dense measurements in active zones, nor the implementation of cost demanding energizing systems, as when electric or active seismic sources are utilized. The principle of muon radiography is essentially the same as X-ray radiography: muons are more attenuated by higher density parts inside the target and thus information about its inner structure are obtained from the differential muon absorption. Up-to-date, muon imaging of volcanic structures has been mainly accomplished with detectors that employ planes of scintillator strips. These telescopes are exposed to different types of background noise (accidental coincidence of vertical shower particles, horizontal high-energy electrons, flux of upward going particles), whose amplitude is high relative to the tiny flux of interest. An alternative technique is based on the detection of the Cherenkov light produced by muons. The latter can be imaged as an annular pattern that contains the information needed to reconstruct both direction and energy of the particle. Cherenkov telescopes have never been utilized to perform muon imaging of volcanoes. Nonetheless, thanks to intrinsic features, they offer the possibility to detect the through-target muon flux with negligible levels of background noise. Under some circumstances, they would also provide a better spatial resolution and acceptance than scintillator-based telescopes. Furthermore, contrarily to the latter systems, Cherenkov detectors allow in-situ measurements of the open-sky energy spectrum of atmospheric muons, that is needed to asses a reference model of the through-target integrated flux. Here we describe our plans for the production of a Cherenkov telescope with suitable characteristics for installation in the summit zone of Etna volcano. <P /
Apparatus and method for non-invasive inspection of solid bodies by muon imaging
The present invention has application in the technical field of measuring instruments and it relates to an apparatus for non-invasive inspection of solid bodies by muon imaging usable in civil engineering, archeology, volcanology, tectonics and everywhere a radiographic and/or tomographic non-destructive inspection of geological and/or engineering structures, even of large dimensions, is necessary The invention further relates to a method for non-invasive inspection by muon imaging implementable by said apparatus
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