5 research outputs found

    *High resolution deployable telescope for satellite application

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    ABSTRACT CO.RI.S.T.A. is involved in a research project funded by ASI (Italian Space Agency), named MITAR, to realise a very compact, lightweight deployable telescope in visible wavelength range to get earth images from microsatellite. The satellite considered for the study is SMART, an Italian academic multi-mission microsatellite operating on circular sunsynchronous orbits. The telescope has a Cassegrain configuration with a parabolic primary mirror and an hyperbolic secondary mirror. This configuration guaranties the best aberrations corrections and the best compactness. The primary and the secondary mirror are 40 cm and 10 cm in diameter respectively, while their relative distance is 52cm. Mirrors will be realised with innovative composite material to obtain lightweight optical elements. Thanks to its limited size and light weight, the system can be easily deployed. The deployable structure will keep the secondary mirror close to the primary one during launch phases. Once in orbit, a system of lenticular tape springs and dumpers will extend the structure. The structure will be enclosed in multilayer blankets that will shield the sensor from light and will thermally stabilize the structure, preventing excessive thermal deformation. The images will be detected by a very high resolution CCD camera installed onboard the satellite

    Cold Adaptation in Antarctic Notothenioids: Comparative Transcriptomics Reveals Novel Insights in the Peculiar Role of Gills and Highlights Signatures of Cobalamin Deficiency

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    Far from being devoid of life, Antarctic waters are home to Cryonotothenioidea, which represent one of the fascinating cases of evolutionary adaptation to extreme environmental conditions in vertebrates. Thanks to a series of unique morphological and physiological peculiarities, which include the paradigmatic case of loss of hemoglobin in the family Channichthyidae, these fish survive and thrive at sub-zero temperatures. While some of the distinctive features of such adaptations have been known for decades, our knowledge of their genetic and molecular bases is still limited. We generated a reference de novo assembly of the icefish Chionodraco hamatus transcriptome and used this resource for a large-scale comparative analysis among five red-blooded Cryonotothenioidea, the sub-Antarctic notothenioid Eleginops maclovinus and seven temperate teleost species. Our investigation targeted the gills, a tissue of primary importance for gaseous exchange, osmoregulation, ammonia excretion, and its role in fish immunity. One hundred and twenty genes were identified as significantly up-regulated in Antarctic species and surprisingly shared by red- and white-blooded notothenioids, unveiling several previously unreported molecular players that might have contributed to the evolutionary success of Cryonotothenioidea in Antarctica. In particular, we detected cobalamin deficiency signatures and discussed the possible biological implications of this condition concerning hematological alterations and the heavy parasitic loads typically observed in all Cryonotothenioide

    Intersatellite link for Earth Observation Satellites constellation

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    This paper is devoted to investigate the possibility to implement a data Intersatellite Link between satellites of an Earth Observation constellation and a dedicated TLC GEO satellite. An EO system is mainly composed of two segments (space and ground) connected by a complex network of communications that permits to manage the operations of the constellation. Due to the high performances in terms of imaging capabilities of the radar/optical payloads a corresponding high capacity to download data to ground is needed. To guarantee that the system is able to download to the ground station, in a proper time, all the images taken from the radar during the mission, external ground stations, located in a polar zone, have to be foreseen. Polar stations offer a service needed to provide the requested images to the users in a near real-time manner. In this paper an alternative approach, using an Intersatellite link system (ISLs) instead of polar stations, is presented. The most relevant trade-offs from technical point of view have been addressed. The purposes of this activities is to demonstrate the capability of a high speed two way optical link, between LEO and GEO terminals, with a bit rate in the order to 2.5 Gbps in the frame of satellites constellation. This implementation should permit to avoid the use of polar stations ensuring in the same time the achievement of high system time performances, in an operational cost-saving approach

    Cold Adaptation in Antarctic Notothenioids: Comparative Transcriptomics Reveals Novel Insights in the Peculiar Role of Gills and Highlights Signatures of Cobalamin Deficiency

    No full text
    Far from being devoid of life, Antarctic waters are home to Cryonotothenioidea, which represent one of the fascinating cases of evolutionary adaptation to extreme environmental conditions in vertebrates. Thanks to a series of unique morphological and physiological peculiarities, which include the paradigmatic case of loss of hemoglobin in the family Channichthyidae, these fish survive and thrive at sub-zero temperatures. While some of the distinctive features of such adaptations have been known for decades, our knowledge of their genetic and molecular bases is still limited. We generated a reference de novo assembly of the icefish Chionodraco hamatus transcriptome and used this resource for a large-scale comparative analysis among five red-blooded Cryonotothenioidea, the sub-Antarctic notothenioid Eleginops maclovinus and seven temperate teleost species. Our investigation targeted the gills, a tissue of primary importance for gaseous exchange, osmoregulation, ammonia excretion, and its role in fish immunity. One hundred and twenty genes were identified as significantly up-regulated in Antarctic species and surprisingly shared by red- and white-blooded notothenioids, unveiling several previously unreported molecular players that might have contributed to the evolutionary success of Cryonotothenioidea in Antarctica. In particular, we detected cobalamin deficiency signatures and discussed the possible biological implications of this condition concerning hematological alterations and the heavy parasitic loads typically observed in all Cryonotothenioidea

    Accumulation and erosion of Mars' south polar layered deposits

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    International audienceMars' polar regions are covered with ice-rich layered deposits that potentially contain a record of climate variations. The sounding radar SHARAD on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter mapped detailed subsurface stratigraphy in the Promethei Lingula region of the south polar plateau, Planum Australe. Radar reflections interpreted as layers are correlated across adjacent orbits and are continuous for up to 150 kilometers along spacecraft orbital tracks. The reflectors are often separated into discrete reflector sequences, and strong echoes are seen as deep as 1 kilometer. In some cases, the sequences are dipping with respect to each other, suggesting an interdepositional period of erosion. In Australe Sulci, layers are exhumed, indicating recent erosion
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