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Newsletter italiano Giugno-Luglio-Agosto 2023 Print E-mail


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2023
February/March - April/May - June/July/August - September/October


ICRANet Newsletter
Giugno/Luglio/Agosto 2023



SOMMARIO
1. Comunicato stampa ICRA-ICRANet “GRB-SN Association within the Binary-Driven Hypernova Model”
2. 5° Zeldovich meeting, 12-16 Giugno 2023, Yerevan (Armenia)
3. 18° Simposio italo - coreano (IK18), 19 – 23 Giugno 2023, Pescara (Italia)
4. Partecipazione ICRANet al “XV International Conference on Gravitation, Astrophysics and Cosmology (ICGAC15)”,3-7 Luglio 2023, APCTP, Gyeongju (Corea del Sud)
5. Partecipazione ICRANet al meeting “The James Webb Space Telescope turns one: the birth and growth of galaxies”,10-14 Luglio 2023, Sesto (Italia)
6.Nuovo accordo di cooperazione tra l’ICRANet e l’Epoka University, 9 Giugno 2023
7.Nuovo accordo di cooperazione tra l’ICRANet ed Archimedes ECA, 31 Luglio 2023
8. Rinnovo dell’accordo di cooperazione tra l’ICRANet e l’Universidade Federal da Paraíba(UFPB), 7 Giugno 2023
9. Seminario del Prof. Felix Mirabel presso il centro ICRANet a Pescara, 27 Luglio 2023
10. Visite scientifiche presso l’ICRANet
11. Pubblicazioni recenti
 


1. Comunicato stampa ICRA-ICRANet “GRB-SN Association within the Binary-Driven Hypernova Model”

Long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), in a few seconds, release luminosities (in gamma-rays) comparable to the luminosity of all stars in the observable Universe, which makes them detectable to the dawn of galaxy and stellar formation. One of the most striking observational properties of some of these sources is that they are accompanied by a supernova (SN) of type Ic, traditionally called GRB SN association or connection. The GRB-SN association, probably the most constraining property of GRB theoretical models, is the subject of a new article by an ICRA-ICRANet collaboration, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal [ApJ, 955 (2023) 93]:https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ace721.

SNe Ic are considered part of the so-called core-collapse SNe, thought to occur in the gravitationalcollapse of the iron core of an evolved star, forming a neutron star (NS). The outer layers are expelledbecause the energy released from the core collapse exceeds their binding energy. On the other hand,long GRBs are mostly thought to be related to events forming stellar-mass black holes (BHs). Therefore,it appears difficult to render the two above theories compatible to produce a GRB-SN by a single object.The new research deepens into this matter, highlighting observational and theoretical facts revealing thepossible role of binaries in these sources. Indeed, it lists some facts that conspicuously evidence thatmost (if not all) GRB-SN should occur in binaries:
  1. GRB-SN are related to massive star explosions; most massive stars belong to binaries. Therefore, most (if not all) GRB-SN progenitors are binary systems.

  2. GRBs are associated with SNe Ic, which lack hydrogen (H) and helium (He), and most SN Ic models use the interaction with a binary companion to remove the H and He layers.

  3. Stellar evolution predicts the direct formation of a BH only from zero-age main-sequence (ZAMS) stars above 25M and without a SN, while observed pre-SN stars are lighter than 18M.
The article analyzes the SN emission in the optical wavelengths of 24 GRB-SN associations. The SN optical emission is thought to be powered by the decay of nickel into cobalt in the ejected material. The peak luminosity and time of occurrence of the SN are shown to be similar among the sources, spanning less than an order of magnitude difference. In contrast, the emission of the associated GRB spans nearly seven orders of magnitude! One should add this result to the above list: it does not seem simple for a single object to explain a cataclysmic event with these two simultaneous properties.

From the modeling viewpoint, the publication focuses on the binary-driven hypernova (BdHN) scenario.In the BdHN model, the GRB-SN event occurs in binary composed of a carbon-oxygen (CO) star and anNS companion. The core of the CO star collapses, generating a newborn NS and the supernova. Thesupernova triggers the GRB-observed episodes whose physical processes are scrutinized. The CO-NSfates explain the diversity of GRBs: BdHNe I are the most extreme with energies 1052 –1054 erg. Theirorbital periods are about 5–10 minutes. In these sources, the material ejected in the SN is easily accretedby the NS companion, so it reaches the point of gravitational collapse, forming a rotating BH. In BdHNeII, the orbital period is 20–40 minutes and emit energies 1052 –1054 erg. The accretion is lower, so the NSremains stable. BdHN III have an orbital period of hours, and the accretion is negligible. They explain GRBs with energies lower than 1050 erg.

The new article features the BdHN frontier multimessenger physics and astrophysics: emission of neutrinos, gravitational waves, and electromagnetic radiation from the radio to the X-rays, to the gamma-rays, to the GeV, to the TeV, to ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs). These occur in seven episodes, identified via time-resolved analysis of observational data, probing new physical ultrarelativistic regimes previously unknown in our galaxy. Attention is given to the first episode, the early SN explosion originating from the 10M CO core collapse (SN-rise), and to the second episode, the accretion of the SN ejecta on the νNS (νNS-rise). The BH formation occurs by accretion of the SN ejecta on the companion NS, rather than the direct massive star collapse, and originates the associated MeV and GeV emission. The energetics are determined by the rotational energy extraction from a Kerr BH originating overcritical electromagnetic fields leading to an ultra-relativistic expanding e+ e− plasma that loads baryons from the ambient and manifests when it reaches transparency in the third episode, the UPE (ultrarelativistic prompt emission).

The corresponding process in the under critical regimes occurring in a test electromagnetic field alignedì with the BH rotation axis leads to the GeV emission, the fourth episode. The fifth Episode addressed the νNS emission with associated synchrotron emission in the X-rays, optical, and radio bands, followed by the sixth and seventh episodes given the Gamma-ray and X-ray flares. The optical radioactive decay of the SN ashes finally follows these seven episodes. Specific examples are given by the SPH simulations performed in collaboration with Los Alamos National Laboratory (see Fig. 1). The energetics of selected BdHNe types and the peak luminosity and time of the 24 SNe are compared and contrasted (see Fig. 2). The cases of two BdHNe I are analyzed in detail (GRB 180720B and GRB 190114C, see Fig. 3). For BdHNe II, the paper describes GRB190829A, and for BdHNe III, GRB171205A.

The unveiled details of the GRB episodes auspices a new era: to use the strongest high-energy sources on planet Earth, such as the European Hard X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) operated by DESY at Hamburg and, for the TeV radiation, the accelerators of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva, in order to perform the diagnosis of GRB physics.

Reference article:
“GRB-SN Association within the Binary-Driven Hypernova Model”; Aimuratov, Y.; Becerra, L. M.; Bianco, C. L.; Cherubini, C.; Della Valle, M.; Filippi, S.; Li, Liang; Moradi, R.; Rastegarnia, F.; Rueda, J. A.; Ruffini, R.; Sahakyan, N.; Wang, Y.; Zhang, S. R.; ApJ, 955 (2023) 93; DOI:https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ace721

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Fig. 1. SPH simulation of a BdHN I
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Fig. 2: Isotropic-equivalent energy of GRB versus the peak luminosity and time of the bolometric light curve of the associated SN.
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Fig. 3: The case of GRB 190114C.


2. Il 5° Zeldovich meeting, 12-16 Giugno 2023, Yerevan (Armenia)


Il 5° Zeldovich meeting, organizzato dall’ICRANet, é una conferenza internazionale in onore di Ya. B. Zeldovich, che si è tenuto presso l’Ani Plaza Hotel a Yerevan (Armenia) dal 12 al 16 Giugno 2023. Questo evento ha celebrato anche l’80° anniversario dell’Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze della Repubblica armena, i cui membri hanno contribuito fortemente allo sviluppo dell’astrofisica relativistica.

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Fig. 4: i partecipanti in presenza al 5° Zeldovich meeting. Fig. 5:collage fotografico degli speakers del 5° Zeldovich meeting.

Il meeting è iniziato lunedì mattina, 12 Giugno con i saluti di aperture del Prof. Remo Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet), del Prof. Narek Sahakyan (Direttore del centro ICRANet Armenia) e di S.E. Hakob Arshakyan, Vice Presidente dell’Armenian National Assembly, alla presenza di eminenti autorità quali S. E. Vahe Gevorgyan, Vice Ministro degli affari esteri dell’Armenia, S. E. Ashot Saghyan, Presidente dell’Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze armena, S.E. Avet Poghosyan, Vice Ministro armeno dell’industria High-Tech, S.E. Alfonso Di Riso, Ambasciatore d’Italia in Armenia e S.E. Nilakshi Saha Sinha, Ambasciatrice dell’India in Armenia.


S.E. Arshakyan ha sottolineato come l’Armenia sia storicamente ricca di traguardi e scoperte scientifiche, soprattutto nel campo dell’astrofisica, della matematica e della fisica. Ha anche enfatizzato la forte partecipazione delle istituzioni scientifiche armene in eventi simili, così come il ruolo prominente ricoperto dall’Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze armena in questo campo. Il Vice Ministro Vahe Gevorgyan ha evidenziato la grande importanza dell’ICRANet in quanto piattaforma per la cooperazione internazionale, e come l’organizzazione di questa prestigiosa conferenza abbia rappresentato un passo importante per un maggiore sviluppo del campo dell’astrofisica relativistica non solo in Armenia, ma anche in tutte le nazioni partecipanti.

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Fig. 6, 7, 8 and 9:il Prof. Remo Ruffini, Direttore ICRANet (in alto a sinistra), il Prof. Narek Sahakyan, Direttore del centro ICRANet Armenia (in alto a destra), S.E. Hakob Arshakyan, Vice Presidente dell’Armenian National Assembly (in basso a sinistra) e S.E. Vahe Gevorgyan, Vice Ministro degli affari esteri armeno (in basso a destra), durante la cerimonia di apertura del 5°Zeldovich meeting a Yerevan il 12 Giugno 2023.
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Fig. 10: il Prof. Remo Ruffini consegna il MG16 Marcel Grossmann Award al Prof. Marat Glifanov, a nome della Russian Academy of Sciences Institute of Space Research. Fig. 11: il Prof. Remo Ruffini saluta S.E. Vahagn Khachaturyan, Presidente della Repubblica armena, in occasione del loro incontro il 14 Giugno 2023.
During the opening ceremony, the Russian scientist Marat Glifanov accepted the MG16 Marcel Grossmann Award on behalf of the Institute of Space Research (IKI) of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The award was presented by ICRANet Director Remo Ruffini for the Spektr-RG/eROSITA satellite. More than 100 participants from 17 different countries joined the conference and presented, in total, 75 talks on the most relevant recent results on multimessanger astrophysics, early universe, large scale structure, cosmic microwave background, neutron stars, black holes, gamma- ray bursts, supernovae, hypernovae, gravitational waves and quantum and gravity. New results on the leading space projects from space based and ground based astrophysical observatories were also reported, such as: the James Webb Space Telescope JWST (USA), presented by Prof. Massimo Stiavelli and Prof. Garth Illingworth; the radio telescope FAST (China), the X-ray observatory Insight-HXMT (China) as well as the high energy particle observatory LHAASO (China), presented for the first time by Prof. Zha Min, Prof. Li Di and Prof. Shuang-Nan Zhang; the Cherenkov telescopes MAGIC (Germany), the gamma-ray telescope DAMPE (China and Italy), the X-ray polarimeter IXPE (USA and Italy), the X-ray observatory Spektr-RG (Russia and Germany, presented by Prof. Rashid Sunyaev and Prof. Marat Gilfanov of the Russian Academy of Sciences), the network of robotic telescopes MASTER (Russia), the neutrino 8 observatories ICECube (Antarctica) and the Baikal-GVD (Russia) as well as planned missions eXTP (enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry mission) and German-Brazilian-Italian ground-based gamma- ray telescope SWGO.

Durante la cerimonia di apertura, lo scienziato russo Marat Glifanov ha ricevuto il MG16 Marcel Grossmann Award a nome dell’Institute of Space Research (IKI) dell’Accademia delle Scienze russa. Il premio è stato consegnato dal Direttore ICRANet Remo Ruffini per il satellite Spektr-RG/eROSITA.Più di 100 partecipanti da 17 diversi paesi hanno partecipato a questa conferenza ed hanno presentato, in totale, 75 sui risultati recenti più rilevanti sull’astronomia multimessenger, l’Universo primordiale, la struttura a larga scala, la radiazione cosmica di fondo, le stelle di neutroni, i buchi neri, i raggi gamma, le Supernovae, le Ipernove, le onde gravitazionali , il quanto e la gravità. Sono stati inoltre presentati nuovi risultati sui principali progetti spaziali degli osservatori astrofisici spaziali e terrestri, quail il James Webb Space Telescope JWST (USA), presentato dal Prof. Massimo Stiavelli e dal Prof. Garth Illingworth; il radio telescopio FAST (Cina), l’X-ray observatory Insight-HXMT (Cina) e l’Osservatorio delle particelle ad alta energia LHAASO (Cina), presento per la prima volta dal Prof. Zha Min, dal Prof. Li Di e dal Prof. Shuang-Nan Zhang; i telescopi Cherenkov MAGIC (Germania), il telescopio per i raggi gamma DAMPE (Cina e Italia), il polarimetroa raggi X IXPE (USA e Italia), l’osservatorio a raggi X Spektr-RG (Russia e Germania, presentato dal Prof. Rashid Sunyaev e dal Prof. Marat Gilfanov dell’Accademia delle Scienze russa), la rete di telescopi robotici MASTER (Russia), gli osservatori di neutrini ICECube (Antartide), il Baikal-GVD (Russia) e le missioni programmate eXTP (enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry mission - missione di temporizzazione e polarimetria a raggi X potenziata) ed il telescopio a terra tedesco – brasiliano - italiano per raggi gamma SWGO.In occasione di questa conferenza, il Presidente della Repubblica armena, S.E. Vahagn Khachaturyan, ha ricevuto, mercoledì 14 Giugno, una delegazione di partecipanti ed organizzatori del 5° Zeldovich meeting. La delegazione era composta dal Prof. Remo Ruffini, dal Prof. Narek Sahakyan, dall’Accademico Ashot Saghyan (Presidente della NAS RA), dal Prof. Shuang-Nan Zhang (Centro di astrofisica delle particelle, Institute of High Energy Physics IHES, CAS), dal Prof. Di Li (Osservatori astronomici nazionali, Accademia cinese delle scienze), dal Prof. Tsvi Piran (Hebrew University di Gerusalemme), dal Prof. Paolo Soffitta (INAF IAPS) e dal Prof. Alexei Starobinsky (Istituto Landau per la fisica teorica RAS). Il Presidente Khachaturyan ha apprezzato molto l'organizzazione di eventi di questo genere ed ha espresso la volontà di sostenere al meglio i programmi e le iniziative nel campo della scienza, sottolineando l'importanza delle attività di ICRANet in Armenia. Il Prof. Ruffini ha accolto favorevolmente la cooperazione con l'Armenia e ha sottolineato l'intenzione di realizzare nuovi programmi con i Paesi dell'Asia Centrale attraverso l'Armenia. Tutti gli interlocutori hanno discusso la possibilità di realizzare programmi congiunti e di approfondire ulteriormente la cooperazione con i centri, le organizzazioni e le università più importanti del mondo, come ad esempio l’ICRANet.

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Fig. 12: S.E. Vahagn Khachaturyan, Presidente della Repubblica armena durante l’incontro con la delegazione del 5° Zeldovich meeting, insieme ai rappresentanti dell’Ambasciata d’Italia a Yerevan il 14 Giugno 2023. Fig. 13:Foto di gruppo della delegazione del 5° Zeldovich meeting con il Presidente dell’Armenia. Da sinistra a destra: il Prof. Alexei Starobinsky, il Prof. Narek Sahakyan, il Prof. Shuang-Nan Zhang, il Prof. Remo Ruffini, S.E. Vahagn Khachaturyan, il Prof. Di Li, il Prof. Tsvi Piran, il Prof. Paolo Soffitta, il Prof. Vahram Dumanyan (Consigliere del Presidente Khachaturyan) e l’Accademico Ashot Saghyan.

Tutti gli astract sottomessi per la conferenza sono stati raccolti nel “book of abstracts”, disponibile sul sito ufficiale del meeting al seguente link:https://indico.icranet.org/event/6/book-of-abstract.pdf

I saluti di chiusura del meeting, per riassumere i nuovi ed importanti risultati scientifici presentati nel corso della conferenza, sono stati fatti dal Prof. Remo Ruffini e dal Prof. Narek Sahakyan.

I proceedings del 5° Zeldovich meeting saranno pubblicati sulla rivista scientifica con referee Astronomy Reports, la principale rivista russa di Astronomia e Astrofisica con alto fattore d’impatto (per il sito web della rivista:https://www.springer.com/journal/11444)Gli editori saranno il Prof. Remo Ruffini, il Prof. Narek Sahakyan ed il Prof. Gregory Vereshchagin.

Questo meeting è la 5° conferenza internazionale dedicata a Ya. B. Zeldovich. I meeting precedent si sono tenuti dal 23 al 27 Aprile 2018 a Minsk, dal 20 al 23 Aprile 2009 a Minsk (coorganizzato dall’ICRANet e dalla Belarusian State University BSU, in onore dell’anno 2009 per l’astronomia), dall’11 al 14 Marzo 2014 (in occasione del 100° compleanno di Ya. B. Zeldovich) e dal 7 all’11 Settembre 2020 online.

Le registrazioni di tutte le sessioni sono disponibili sul canale YouTube dell’ICRANet al seguente link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQuXRbnJ6o4&list=PLr5RLbSWSonvawHlYpDVmRJIUoPHtopw7

Per il sito web del meeting e per le presentazioni degli speakers: http://www.icranet.org/zeldovich5

Per il comunicato stampa sul sito della National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia:http://www.parliament.am/news.php?cat_id=2&NewsID=18950&year=2023&month=06&day=12&lang=arm&e nc=utf8


Per il comunicato stampa sul sito Armen Press: https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1113073/

Per il comunicato stampa sul sito della NAS RA:https://www.sci.am/m/newsview.php?id=706&arch=&langid=2

Per il comunicato stampa sul sito della Presidenza della Repubblica armena:https://www.president.am/en/press-release/item/2023/06/14/President-Vahagn-Khachaturyan/

Per il video sul canale YouTube del Parlamento armeno:a xhref="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foQYriAY0Ck&t=107s" mce_href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foQYriAY0Ck&t=107s" target="_blank">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foQYriAY0Ck&t=107s

3.Il 18° Simposio italo - coreano (IK18), 19 – 23 Giugno 2023, Pescara (Italia)

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l 18° Simposio italo - coreano di astrofisica relativistica si è tenuto dal 19 al 23 Giugno 2023 presso il centro ICRANet a Pescara e online. Il meeting è stato co-organizzato dalla Kunsan National University, da CQUeST e dalla Sogang University (da parte coreana) e, dalla parte italiana, dall’ICRANet. I Simposi italo - coreani di astrofisica relativistica sono una serie di meeting biennali, organizzati in maniera alternata tra Italia e Corea dal 1987. L’obiettivo principale di questo simposio è quello di accelerare lo scambio tra scienziati italiani e coreani, soprattutto tra i più giovani.

I membri del Comitato italiano dell’IK18 sono Remo Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet, ICRA), Carlo Luciano Bianco (ICRA, ICRANet), Massimo Della Valle (Osservatorio astronomico di Capodimonte, INAF, ICRANet), Luca Izzo (Osservatorio astronomico di Capodimonte, INAF), Paolo Giommi (ASI), Roy Patrick Kerr (ICRANet), Liang Li (ICRANet), Rahim Moradi (ICRANet), Jorge A. Rueda H. (ICRANet, Università di Ferrara), Narek Sahakyan (Direttore del centro ICRANet in Armenia), Gregory Vereshchagin (ICRANet), Yu Wang (ICRANet) e Shesheng Xue (ICRANet). I membri del Comitato coreano dell’IK18 sono Stefano Scopel (CQUeST, Sogang University), Bum-Hoon Lee (CQUeST, Sogang University), Sang Pyo Kim (Kunsan National University), Sung-WonKin (EhwaUniversity), Wonwoo Lee (CQUeST, Sogang University), Hyeong Chan Kim (AIP) e Lee Heongwon.

Le tematiche trattate nel corso di questi meeting sono sempre state l’astrofisica e la cosmologia, i raggi gamma, le stelle compatte, i raggi cosmici ad alta energia, l’energia e la materia oscura, la relatività generale, i buchi neri e la nuova fisica legata alla cosmologia. Quest’anno l'attenzione si è concentrata sulla massa irriducibile, sull'emissione di onde gravitazionali dai GRB e sulle configurazioni ellissoidali di equilibrio nella Relatività Generale. I più recenti sviluppi scientifici sono stati presentati da eminenti professori e ricercatori.

I saluti di aperture sono stati fatti dal Prof. Remo Ruffini e dal Prof. Stefano Scopel. Gli speakers sono stati il Prof. Dong-Hoon Kim, il Prof. Wonwoo Lee, il Prof. Sang Pyo Kim, il Prof. Stefano Scopel, il Prof. Dong-hun Lee, il Prof. Chanyong Park, il Prof. Chan Park, il Prof. Bum-Hoon Lee, il Prof. Sung-Won Kim, il Prof. Remo Ruffini, il Prof. Carlo Luciano Bianco, il Prof. Gregory Vereshchagin, il Prof. Massimo Della Valle, il Prof. Lorenzo Amati, il Prof. Jorge Rueda, il Prof. Rahim Moradi, il Prof. Yu Wang, il Prof. Antonio Enea Romano, Shurui Zhang, il Dr Josè Fernando Rodriguez Ruiz, il Prof. Shesheng Xue, il Prof. Muhammad Sharif e Abdel Nasser Tawfik.

Per maggiori informazioni sul meeting: https://indico.icranet.org/event/7/

4. Partecipazione ICRANet al “XV International Conference on Gravitation, Astrophysics and Cosmology (ICGAC15)”, 3-7 Luglio 2023, APCTP, Gyeongju (Corea del Sud)

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Il 7 Luglio 2023, il Prof. Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet) è stato invitato a presentare una conferenza plenaria in occasione dell’edizione 2023 dell’International Conference on Gravitation, Astrophysics and Cosmology (ICGAC15), che si è svolta a Gyeongju (Corea del Sud) ed online dal 3 al 7 Luglio 2023.

Venerdì 7 Luglio, il Prof. Ruffini ha presentato la sua conferenza plenaria intitolata “GRB 220101A: the most powerful GRB with seven BdHN Episodes observed”.

Il Prof. Ruffini era anche membro del Comitato permanente internazionale ICGAC15, del Comitato consultivo internazionale ICGAC15 e del Comitato scientifico ICGAC15.

L'ICGAC è una serie di conferenze triennali sulla gravitazione, l'astrofisica e la cosmologia che si svolgono nella regione Asia-Pacifico, con l'obiettivo di promuovere la cooperazione tra i Paesi membri ed in un contesto internazionale, studi di alto livello su temi scottanti e di incoraggiare i giovani fisici in questi campi. Questa conferenza è stata uno dei programmi chiave sponsorizzati dall'APCTP negli ultimi vent’anni ed è stata ospitata dalle regioni dell'Asia - Pacifico: Seoul, Corea del sud (1993); Hsinchu, Taiwan (1995); Tokyo, Giappone (1997); Pechino, Cina (1999); Mosca, Russia (2001); Seoul, Corea del sud (2003); Jhongli, Taiwan (2005); Nara, Giappone (2007); Wuhan, Cina (2009); Qui-Nhon, Vietnam (2011); Almaty, Kazakistan (2013); Mosca, Russia (2015), Seoul, Corea del sud (2017) e Taiwan (2020).

The main topics covered during the ICGAC15 meeting included classical Gravity and GR Extensions, Classical and Quantum Cosmology, Dark Matter and Dark Energy, Black Holes, Wormholes, Strings, Branes, Higher Spin Fields and Quantum Gravity, extra Dimensions and Variation of Constants, Experimental Studies of Gravity and Fundamental Physics Space Projects, Gravitational Waves, Multi Messenger Astronomy, Numerical Relativity, Relativistic Astrophysics, White Dwarfs, Neutron Stars and Gamma Ray Bursts, Alternative Theory and Education.


5. artecipazione ICRANet al meeting “The James Webb Space Telescope turns one: the birth and growth of galaxies”, 10-14 Luglio 2023, Sesto (Italia)

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Il 10 Luglio 2023, il Prof. Remo Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet) ha preso parte alla giornata di apertura del meeting “The James Webb Space Telescope turns one: the birth and growth of galaxies”, che si è svolto dal 10 al 14 Luglio presso il Sexten Center for Astrophysics Riccardo Giacconi (Italia).

A un anno dal rilascio dei primi dati del James Webb Space Telescope, il meeting aveva l’obiettivo di riunire scienziati, ricercatori e studenti di rilievo per discutere le trasformazioni scientifiche consentite dalle osservazioni di Webb nel campo della formazione e dell'evoluzione delle galassie, dai primi stadi alle fasi più mature della storia cosmica. I principali argomenti trattati durante il meeting sono stati il processo dalle prime stelle all'attuale formazione delle stelle, la polvere e il mezzo circum-galattico nelle galassie lontane, la storia della reionizzazione, la crescita di massa delle galassie e la loro prima evoluzione morfologica, nonché l'attività dei nuclei galattici attivi ad alto redshift.

Dopo la cerimonia di apertura, il primo giorno del meeting è stato dedicato principalmente alla presentazione dello stato e della panoramica dei risultati del JWST, nonché dei primi risultati sulla formazione e l'evoluzione delle galassie precoci ottenuti dalle indagini del JWST.

Per il sito web del meeting: https://www.sexten-cfa.eu/event/jwebb23/

6. Nuovo accordo di cooperazione tra l’ICRANet e l’Epoka University, 9 Giugno 2023

Il 9 Giugno 2023, l'ICRANet ha firmato un accordo con l’Epoka University in Albania. I firmatari dell'accordo sono il Prof. Ahmet Öztaş (Rettore dell’Epoka University), il Prof. Arban Uka (Epoka University), il Prof. Remo Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet) ed il Prof. Jorge A. Rueda (Professore della Faculty ICRANet).

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L'accordo sarà valido per 5 anni e le principali attività congiunte che saranno portate avanti nel quadro del progetto comprendono: la promozione delle attività teoriche e di osservazione nel campo dell'astrofisica relativistica; lo scambio istituzionale di membri, ricercatori, post-doc, e studenti; lo sviluppo di tecnologie e di dati per l'astrofisica su tutte le bande di frequenza; l'organizzazione di corsi, seminari, conferenze, workshops; lo sviluppo di ricerche inter-instituzionali e pubblicazioni congiunte.


7. Nuovo accordo di cooperazione tra l’ICRANet ed Archimedes ECA, 31 Luglio 2023

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Il 31 Luglio 2023, l’ICRANet ha firmato un accordo con l’associazione Archimedes ECA in Francia. I firmatari dell’accordo sono il Prof. Joseph Kouneiher (Presidente di Archimedes ECA) ed il Prof. Remo Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet).

L'accordo sarà valido per 5 anni e le principali attività congiunte che saranno portate avanti nel quadro del progetto comprendono: la promozione delle attività teoriche e di osservazione nel campo dell'astrofisica relativistica; lo scambio istituzionale di membri, ricercatori, post-doc, e studenti; lo sviluppo di tecnologie e di dati per l'astrofisica su tutte le bande di frequenza; l'organizzazione di corsi, seminari, conferenze, workshops; lo sviluppo di ricerche inter-instituzionali e pubblicazioni congiunte.


8. Rinnovo dell’accordo di cooperazione tra l’ICRANet e l’Universidade Federal da Paraíba(UFPB), 7 Giugno 2023

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Il 7 Giugno 2023, l’ICRANet e l’Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB) hanno rinnovato l'accordo di cooperazione. I firmatari sono stati il Prof. Valdiney Neloso Gouveia (Rwettore UFPB) ed il Prof. Remo Ruffini (Direttore ICRANet). L'accordo sarà valido per 5 anni e le principali attività congiunte che saranno portate avanti nel quadro del progetto comprendono: la promozione delle attività teoriche e di osservazione nel campo dell'astrofisica relativistica; lo scambio istituzionale di membri, ricercatori, post-doc, e studenti; lo sviluppo di tecnologie e di dati per l'astrofisica su tutte le bande di frequenza; l'organizzazione di corsi, seminari, conferenze, workshops; lo sviluppo di ricerche inter-instituzionali e pubblicazioni congiunte.


9. Seminario del Prof. Felix Mirabel presso il centro ICRANet a Pescara, 27 Luglio 2023

Il giorno martedì 27 Luglio 2023, il Prof. Felix Mirabel (IAFE-Università di Buenos Aires e CEA-Saclay) hanno presentato un semonario dal titolo “Did Black hole-jets enhancedthe formation of Pop-III stars at cosmic dawn?”; di seguito l’abstract:

The existence of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) of 10^9 solar masses in quasars at cosmic ages of less than 700 Myr is an intriguing puzzle. How the seeds of these SMBHs have formed and grown so fast to become so large? Models of the compact seeds of the SMBHs observed at redshifts z > 6 propose in the context of dark matter cosmologies those seeds are formed by direct collapse in dark matter haloes. I will show that recent high-z ALMA and JWST observations are consistent with the astrophysical hypotheses in those models. Finally, integrating those recent theoretical and observational contexts, with past extensive studies of the environments of BH-jets in the local and distant universe, I will conclude that the relativistic jets and associated massive outflows from rapidly growing BHs at cosmic dawn must have enhanced the formation of Pop-III massive stars.

L'annuncio del seminario è stato anche pubblicato sul sito web dell'ICRANet:https://www.icranet.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogcategory&id=89&Itemid=781

Per il video del seminario:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9_cGdVT35A

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Fig. 14 and 15: il Prof.Felix Mirabel durante il suo seminario presso il centro ICRANet a Pescara, 27 Luglio 2023.

10. Scientific visits to ICRANet
  • Prof. Mohamed Gadri (University of Tripoli, Libya), 6-11 Giugno 2023
  • Prof. Stefano Scopel (Sogang University, South Korea), 7-25 Giugno 2023
  • Prof. Antonio Enea Romano (Universidad de Antioquia UDEA, Colombia),20 Giugno – 5 Luglio 2023
  • Dr Mikalai Prakapenia (ICRANet-Minsk and Belarusian State University), 17-29 Luglio 2023
  • Prof. Felix Mirabel (IAFE-University of Buenos Aires & CEA-Saclay, France), 26 Luglio – 8 Agosto 2023
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Prof. Mohamed Gadri Prof. Stefano Scopel Dr Mikalai Prakapenia Prof. Felix Mirabel

Durante la loro visita, questi scienziati hanno avuto l'opportunità di discutere le loro ricerche scientifiche e di avere interessanti scambi con gli altri ricercatori dell'ICRANet e da diverse parti del mondo.

11.Pubblicazioni recenti

Y. Aimuratov, L. M. Becerra, C.L. Bianco, C. Cherubini, M. Della Valle, S. Filippi, Liang Li, R. Moradi, F. Rastegarnia, J. A. Rueda, R. Ruffini, N. Sahakyan, Y. Wang, S. R. Zhang, GRB-SN Association within the Binary-Driven Hypernova Model, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal.

The observations of supernovae (SNe) Ic occurring after the prompt emission of long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are addressed within the binary-driven hypernova (BdHN) model where GRBs originate from a binary composed of a ∼10M ⊙ carbon-oxygen (CO) star and a neutron star (NS). The CO core collapse gives the trigger, leading to a hypernova with a fast-spinning newborn NS (νNS) at its center. The evolution depends strongly on the binary period, Pbin. For Pbin∼5min, BdHNe I occur with energies 1052 -1054 erg. The accretion of SN ejecta onto the NS leads to its collapse, forming a black hole (BH) originating the MeV/GeV radiation. For Pbin∼10min, BdHNe II occur with energies 1050 -1052 erg and for Pbin∼hours, BdHN III occurs with energies below 1050 erg. {In BdHNe II and III,} no BH is formed. The 1-1000ms νNS originates, in all BdHNe, the X-ray-optical-radio afterglows by synchrotron emission. The hypernova follows an independent evolution, becoming an SN Ic, powered by nickel decay, observable after the GRB prompt emission. We report 24 SNeIc associated with BdHNe. Their optical peak luminosity and time of occurrence are similar and independent of the associated GRBs. {From previously identified 380 BdHN I comprising redshifts up to z=8.2, we analyze} four examples with their associated hypernovae. By multiwavelength extragalactic observations, we identify seven new Episodes, theoretically explained, fortunately not yet detected in galactic sources, opening new research areas. Refinement of population synthesis simulations is needed to map the progenitors of such short- lived binary systems inside our galaxy.


Antonio Enea Romano, Mairi Sakellariadou, Mirage of Luminal Modified Gravitational-Wave Propagation, publish in Phys. Rev. Lett. 130, 231401 on June 8, 2023.

Using conformal invariance of gravitational waves, we show that for a luminal modified gravity theory, the gravitational-wave propagation and luminosity distance are the same as in general relativity. The relation between the gravitational-wave and electromagnetic-wave luminosity distance gets modified, however, for electromagnetism minimally coupled to the Jordan frame metric. Using effective field theory we show that the modified relation obtained for luminal theories is also valid for nonluminal theories with Jordan frame matter-gravity coupling. We generalize our analysis to a time-dependent speed of gravitational waves with matter minimally coupled to either the Jordan or Einstein frame metrics.


Laura M. Becerra, Chris Fryer, Jose F. Rodriguez, Jorge A. Rueda and Remo Ruffini, Neutron Star Binaries Produced by Binary-Driven Hypernovae, Their Mergers, and the Link between Long and Short GRBs, published in Universe 2023, 9(7), 332 on July 12, 2023.

The binary-driven hypernova (BdHN) model explains long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) associated with supernovae (SNe) Ic through physical episodes that occur in a binary composed of a carbon-oxygen (CO) star and a neutron star (NS) companion in close orbit. The CO core collapse triggers the cataclysmic event, originating the SN and a newborn NS (hereafter 𝜈𝜈NS) at its center. The 𝜈𝜈NS and the NS accrete SN matter. BdHNe are classified based on the NS companion fate and the GRB energetics, mainly determined by the orbital period. In BdHNe I, the orbital period is of a few minutes, so the accretion causes the NS to collapse into a Kerr black hole (BH), explaining GRBs of energies >1052 erg. BdHN II, with longer periods of tens of minutes, yields a more massive but stable NS, accounting for GRBs of 1050 –1052 erg. BdHNe III have still longer orbital periods (e.g., hours), so the NS companion has a negligible role, which explains GRBs with a lower energy release of <1050 erg. BdHN I and II might remain bound after the SN, so they could form NS-BH and binary NS (BNS), respectively. In BdHN III, the SN likely disrupts the system. We perform numerical simulations of BdHN II to compute the characteristic parameters of the BNS left by them, their mergers, and the associated short GRBs. We obtain the mass of the central remnant, whether it is likely to be a massive NS or a BH, the conditions for disk formation and its mass, and the event’s energy release. The role of the NS nuclear equation of state is outlined.


Jonas P. Pereira and Jorge A. Rueda, Matching Slowly Rotating Spacetimes Split by Dynamic Thin Shells, published in Universe 2023, 9(7), 305 onJune 24, 2023.

We investigated within the Darmois–Israel thin-shell formalism the match of neutral and asymptotically flat, slowly rotating spacetimes (up to second order in the rotation parameter) when their boundaries are dynamic. It has several important applications in general relativistic systems, such as black holes and neutron stars, which we exemplify. We mostly focused on the stability aspects of slowly rotating thin shells in equilibrium and the surface degrees of freedom on the hypersurfaces splitting the matched slowly rotating spacetimes, e.g., surface energy density and surface tension. We show that the stability upon perturbations in the spherically symmetric case automatically implies stability in the slow rotation case. In addition, we show that, when matching slowly rotating Kerr spacetimes through thin shells in equilibrium, the surface degrees of freedom can decrease compared to their Schwarzschild counterparts, meaning that the energy conditions could be weakened. The frame-dragging aspects of the match of slowly rotating spacetimes are also briefly discussed.


Vitaliy Kim, Adel Umirbayeva and YerlanAimuratov, Estimates of the Surface Magnetic Field Strength of Radio Pulsars, published in Universe 2023, 9(7), 334 on July 14, 2023.

We investigate the geometry of the magnetic field of rotation-powered pulsars. A new method for calculating an angle (𝛽𝛽) between the spin and magnetic dipole axes of a neutron star (NS) in the ejector stage is considered within the frame of the magnetic dipole energy loss mechanism. We estimate the surface magnetic field strength (𝐵𝐵ns) for a population of known neutron stars in the radio pulsar (ejector) stage. The evaluated 𝐵𝐵ns(𝛽𝛽) may differ by an order of magnitude from the values without considering the angle 𝛽𝛽. It is shown that 𝐵𝐵ns(𝛽𝛽) lies in the range 108 –1014G for a known population of short and middle periodic radio pulsars.


Mikalai Prakapenia, Gregory Vereshchagin, Pauli blocking effects on pair creation in strong electric field, published in Phys. Rev. D 108, 013002 on July12, 2023.

The process of electron-positron pair creation and oscillation in a uniform electric field is studied, taking into account the Pauli exclusion principle. Generally, we find that pair creation is suppressed; hence, coherent oscillations occur on longer timescales. Considering pair creation in already existing electron- positron plasma, we find that the dynamics depends on pair distribution function. We considered Fermi- Dirac distribution of pairs and found that for small temperatures pair creation is suppressed, while for small chemical potentials it increases: heating leads to enhancement of pair creation.


Roohollah Mohammadi, Jafar Khodagholizadeh, Mahdi Sadegh, Ali Vahedi, She-sheng Xue, Cross-correlation Power Spectra and Cosmic Birefringence of the CMB via Photon-neutrino Interaction, published in JCAP 06 (2023) 044 onJune 20, 2023.

In the context of the standard model of particles, the weak interaction of cosmic microwave background (CMB) and cosmic neutrino background (CνB), can generate non-vanishing TB and EB power spectra in the order of one loop forward scattering, in the presence of scalar perturbation, which is in contrast with the standard scenario cosmology. Comparing our results with the current experimental data may provide, significant information about the nature of CνB, including CMB-CνB forward scattering for TB, TE, and EB power spectra. To this end, different cases were studied, including Majorana CνB and Dirac CνB. On the other hand, it was shown that the mean opacity due to cosmic neutrino background could behave as an anisotropic birefringent medium and change the linear polarization rotation angle. Considering the contributions from neutrino and anti-neutrino forward scattering with CMB photons (in the case of Dirac neutrino), we introduce relative neutrino and anti-neutrino density asymmetry (δν = Δnν/nν = nν-n-ν/nν). Then, using the cosmic birefringence angle reported by the Planck data release β = 0.30° ± 0.11° (68%C.L.), some constraints can be put on δν. Also, the value of cosmic birefringence due to Majorana CνB medium is estimated at about β|ν≃ 0.2 rad. In this respect, since Majorana neutrino and anti-neutrino are exactly the same, both CB contributions will be added together. However, this value is at least two orders larger than the cosmic birefringence angle reported by the Planck data release, β = 0.30° ± 0.11° (68%C.L.). Finally, we shortly discussed this big inconsistency. It is noteworthy that to calculate the contribution of photon-neutrino forward scattering for cosmic birefringence, we just consider the standard model of particles and the standard scenario of cosmology.


She-Sheng Xue, Massive particle pair production and oscillation in Friedman Universe: reheating energy and entropy, and cold dark matter, published in Eur. Phys. J. C (2023) 83: 355.

Suppose that the early Universe starts with a cosmological Λ-term originating from quantum spacetime at the Planck scale. Dark energy drives inflation and reheating by reducing its value for massive particle-antiparticle pairs production and oscillation, resulting in a holographic and massive pair plasma state. The back-and-forth reaction of dark energy and massive pairs slows inflation to its end and starts reheating by rapidly producing stable and unstable pairs. We introduce the Boltzmann-type rate equation describing the back-and-forth reaction. It forms a close set with Friedman equations and reheating equations for unstable pairs decay to relativistic particles. The numerical solutions show preheating, massive pairs dominated and genuine reheating episodes. We obtain the reheating temperature and entropy in terms of the tensor-to-scalar ratio 0c∼10−1 is about a constant in time.

Argüelles, C. R.; Boshkayev, K.; Krut, A.; Nurbakhyt, G.; Rueda, J. A.; Ruffini, R.; Uribe- Suárez, J. D.; Yunis, R., On the growth of supermassive black holes formed from the gravitational collapse of fermionic dark matter cores, published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 523, Issue 2 on August 2023.

Observations support the idea that supermassive black holes (SMBHs) power the emission at the centre of active galaxies. However, contrary to stellar-mass BHs, there is a poor understanding of their origin and physical formation channel. In this article, we propose a new process of SMBH formation in the early Universe that is not associated with baryonic matter (massive stars) or primordial cosmology. In this novel approach, SMBH seeds originate from the gravitational collapse of fermionic dense dark matter (DM) cores that arise at the centre of DM haloes as they form. We show that such a DM formation channel can occur before star formation, leading to heavier BH seeds than standard baryonic channels. The SMBH seeds subsequently grow by accretion. We compute the evolution of the mass and angular momentum of the BH using a geodesic general relativistic disc accretion model. We show that these SMBH seeds grow to ∼109–1010M in the first Gyr of the lifetime of the Universe without invoking unrealistic (or fine-tuned) accretion rates.

B. Eslam Panah, Three-dimensional energy-dependent C-metric: black hole solutions, published in Physics Letters Bon August 19, 2023.

Considering a three-dimensional C-metric and adding energy-dependent to this spacetime, we first create a three-dimensional energy-dependent C-metric. Then, we extract accelerating BTZ black hole solutions in gravity's rainbow. Besides, we show that (A)dS black holes cover by an event horizon that depends on all the parameters of this theory. Using the definition of Hawking temperature, we obtain the temperature of these black holes and study the effects of various parameters on this quantity. We find a critical radius in which the temperature is always positive (negative) before (after) it. Then, we obtain the entropy of such black holes. Our analysis indicates that there is the same behavior for entropy, similar to the temperature. Indeed, before (after) the critical radius, the entropy is positive (negative). In order to study the local stability of such black holes, we calculate the heat capacity. We find two different behaviors for the heat capacity, which depend on the cosmological energy-dependent constant. As a final result, accelerating AdS BTZ black holes can satisfy the physical condition and local stability at the same time.


Li Liang, Revisiting the Spectral Energy Correlations of GRBs with Fermi Data. I. Model-wise Properties, published in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, Volume 266, Number 2 on June 5, 2023.

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) exhibit a diversity of spectra. Several spectral models (e.g., Band, cutoff power law (CPL), and blackbody) and their hybrid versions (e.g., Band+blackbody) have been widely used to fit the observed GRB spectra. Here, we attempt to collect all the bursts detected by Fermi/GBM with known redshifts from 2008 July to 2022 May, having been motivated to (i) provide a parameter catalog independent of the official Fermi/GBM team and (ii) achieve a "clean" model-based GRB spectral energy correlation analysis. A nearly complete GRB sample is created, containing 153 such bursts (136 long GRBs and 17 short GRBs). Using the sample and by performing detailed spectral analysis and model comparisons, we investigate two GRB spectral energy correlations: the correlation of the cosmological rest-frame peak energy (Ep,z) of the νFν prompt emission spectrum with (i) the isotropic-bolometric-equivalent emission energy Eγ,iso (the Amati relation) and (ii) the isotropic-bolometric-equivalent peak luminosity Lp,iso (the Yonetoku relation). From a linear regression analysis, a tight correlation between Ep,z and Eγ,iso (and Lγ,iso) is found for both Band-like and CPL-like bursts (except for CPL-like long burst Ep,z–Eγ,iso correlation). More interestingly, CPL-like bursts do not fall on the Band-like burst Amati and Yonetoku correlations, suggesting distinct radiation processes, and pointing to the fact that these spectral energy correlations are tightly reliant on the model-wise properties.


Gómez, Gabriel; Rodríguez, José F., New non-Abelian Reissner-Nordström black hole solutions in the generalized SU(2) Proca theory and some astrophysical implications, published in Phys. Rev. D 108, 024069 on July 31, 2023.

The generalized SU(2) Proca theory is a vector-tensor theory of gravity whose action is invariant under global transformations of the SU(2) group and includes second-order derivative self-interactions of the vector field beyond the massive Yang-Mills theory. We find, in particular, that the presence of two Lagrangian pieces consisting of four gauge fields minimally coupled to gravity gives rise to an exact Reissner-Nordström black hole solution endowed with two different non-Abelian effective charges that depend on the specific combination χ=2χ1+χ2 of the respective coupling constants. After studying the spacetime structure of the black hole, which allows us to characterize the parameter space that preserves the weak cosmic censorship conjecture, some astrophysical implications of the black hole solutions are investigated. First, joint analysis of observations of the Event Horizon Telescope’s first images of Sagittarius A⋆ of our Galaxy and the Keck telescope set the first serious constraint on the free parameters of the theory beyond the theoretical bounds found. Second, we investigate the accretion properties of spherical steady flows around this class of non-Abelian Reissner-Nordström black hole. Specifically, we examine the general conditions under which transonic flow is allowed. An analytical solution for critical accretion is found in terms of the coupling constant. In addition, we explore the effect of changing χ on the radial velocity and mass density numerically and show how the extremal Reissner-Nordström and the standard Schwarzschild solutions as limit cases are achieved. Finally, working in the fully relativistic regime, an analytical expression for the critical mass accretion rate of a polytropic fluid onto a black hole is derived. As a main result, we find that the critical accretion rate efficiency can be noticeably improved compared to the Schwarzschild case for a specific region of the parameter space where the non-Abelian charge becomes imaginary.


 
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