3 resultados para OBSERVABLES

em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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This thesis concerns the study of the variable stars and resolved stellar populations in four recently discovered dSphs, namely, Hercules and Ursa Major I (UMa I), which are UFD satellites of the MW; Andromeda XIX (And XIX) and Andromeda XXI (And XXI), which are satellites of M31. The main aim is to obtain detailed informations on the properties (age, metallicity, distance, and Oosterhoff type) of the stellar populations in these galaxies, to compare them with those of other satellites around the MW and M31, both ''classical'' dSphs and UFDs. The observables used to achieve these goals are the pulsating variables, especially the RR Lyrae stars, and the color magnitude diagram (CMD) of the resolved stellar populations. In particular, for UMa I, we combined B, V time-series observations from four different ground-based telescopes (Cassini, TLS, TT1 and Subaru) and for Hercules, we used archival data acquired with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on board the HST. We used, instead B and V times-series photometry obtained with the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) for And XIX and And XXI .

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This thesis was carried out inside the ESA's ESEO mission and focus in the design of one of the secondary payloads carried on board the spacecraft: a GNSS receiver for orbit determination. The purpose of this project is to test the technology of the orbit determination in real time applications by using commercial components. The architecture of the receiver includes a custom part, the navigation computer, and a commercial part, the front-end, from Novatel, with COCOM limitation removed, and a GNSS antenna. This choice is motivated by the goal of demonstrating the correct operations in orbit, enabling a widespread use of this technology while lowering the cost and time of the device’s assembly. The commercial front-end performs GNSS signal acquisition, tracking and data demodulation and provides raw GNSS data to the custom computer. This computer processes this raw observables, that will be both transferred to the On-Board Computer and then transmitted to Earth and provided as input to the recursive estimation filter on-board, in order to obtain an accurate positioning of the spacecraft, using the dynamic model. The main purpose of this thesis, is the detailed design and development of the mentioned GNSS receiver up to the ESEO project Critical Design Review, including requirements definition, hardware design and breadboard preliminary test phase design.

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The first chapter of this work has the aim to provide a brief overview of the history of our Universe, in the context of string theory and considering inflation as its possible application to cosmological problems. We then discuss type IIB string compactifications, introducing the study of the inflaton, a scalar field candidated to describe the inflation theory. The Large Volume Scenario (LVS) is studied in the second chapter paying particular attention to the stabilisation of the Kähler moduli which are four-dimensional gravitationally coupled scalar fields which parameterise the size of the extra dimensions. Moduli stabilisation is the process through which these particles acquire a mass and can become promising inflaton candidates. The third chapter is devoted to the study of Fibre Inflation which is an interesting inflationary model derived within the context of LVS compactifications. The fourth chapter tries to extend the zone of slow-roll of the scalar potential by taking larger values of the field φ. Everything is done with the purpose of studying in detail deviations of the cosmological observables, which can better reproduce current experimental data. Finally, we present a slight modification of Fibre Inflation based on a different compactification manifold. This new model produces larger tensor modes with a spectral index in good agreement with the date released in February 2015 by the Planck satellite.