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Stellar intensity interferometry: Prospects for sub-milliarcsecond optical imaging
Authors:Dainis Dravins  Stephan LeBohec  Hannes Jensen  Paul D Nuñez
Institution:1. Lund Observatory, Box 43, SE-22100 Lund, Sweden;2. Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Utah, 115 South 1400 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0830, USA;1. School of Geodesy and Geomatics, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430079, China;2. Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200030, China;3. RISE Project, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Iwate 023-0861, Japan;4. GNSS Research Center, Wuhan University, 129 Luoyu Road, Wuhan 430079, China;1. ISEL, IPL, Av. Conselheiro Emídio Navarro, 1, 1959-007 Lisboa, Portugal;2. LAETA, IDMEC, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1, 1049-01 Lisboa, Portugal;1. Department of Mineralogy, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK;2. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory,11100 Johns Hopkins Road, Laurel, MD 20723, USA;3. Finnish Centre for Astronomy with ESO (FINCA), University of Turku, Tuorla Observatory, Väisäläntie 20, FI-21500 Piikkiö, Finland;4. Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012, MRC 119, Washington, DC 20013-7012, USA;5. Department of Physical Sciences, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK;1. The Pulkovo Astronomical Observatory (CAO RAS), Pulkovskoye chaussee, 65, Saint-Petersburg 196140, Russia;2. The Special Astrophysical Observatory (SAO RAS), Special Astrophysical Observatory, Nizhnij Arkhyz, Zelenchukskiy Region, Karachai-Cherkessian Republic 369167, Russia;1. Planetary Science Directorate, Southwest Research Institute, 1050 Walnut St. #300, Boulder, CO 80302, USA;2. Center for Wave Phenomena, Colorado School of Mines, 1500 Illinois Street, Golden, CO 80401, USA;1. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA;2. Institute for Nuclear Research RAS, pr. 60-letiya Oktyabrya 7a, 117312 Moscow, Russia
Abstract:Using kilometric arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes at short wavelengths, intensity interferometry may increase the spatial resolution achieved in optical astronomy by an order of magnitude, enabling images of rapidly rotating hot stars with structures in their circumstellar disks and winds, or mapping out patterns of nonradial pulsations across stellar surfaces. Intensity interferometry (once pioneered by Hanbury Brown and Twiss) connects telescopes only electronically, and is practically insensitive to atmospheric turbulence and optical imperfections, permitting observations over long baselines and through large airmasses, also at short optical wavelengths. The required large telescopes (~10 m) with very fast detectors (~ns) are becoming available as the arrays primarily erected to measure Cherenkov light emitted in air by particle cascades initiated by energetic gamma rays. Planned facilities (e.g., CTA, Cherenkov Telescope Array) envision many tens of telescopes distributed over a few square km. Digital signal handling enables very many baselines (from tens of meters to over a kilometer) to be simultaneously synthesized between many pairs of telescopes, while stars may be tracked across the sky with electronic time delays, in effect synthesizing an optical interferometer in software. Simulated observations indicate limiting magnitudes around mV = 8, reaching angular resolutions ~30 μarcsec in the violet. The signal-to-noise ratio favors high-temperature sources and emission-line structures, and is independent of the optical passband, be it a single spectral line or the broad spectral continuum. Intensity interferometry directly provides the modulus (but not phase) of any spatial frequency component of the source image; for this reason a full image reconstruction requires phase retrieval techniques. This is feasible if sufficient coverage of the interferometric (u, v)-plane is available, as was verified through numerical simulations. Laboratory and field experiments are in progress; test telescopes have been erected, intensity interferometry has been achieved in the laboratory, and first full-scale tests of connecting large Cherenkov telescopes have been carried out. This paper reviews this interferometric method in view of the new possibilities offered by arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, and outlines observational programs that should become realistic already in the rather near future.
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