144 research outputs found
Laser Tomography Adaptive Optics (LTAO): A performance study
We present an analytical derivation of the on-axis performance of Adaptive
Optics systems using a given number of guide stars of arbitrary altitude,
distributed at arbitrary angular positions in the sky. The expressions of the
residual error are given for cases of both continuous and discrete turbulent
atmospheric profiles. Assuming Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensing with circular
apertures, we demonstrate that the error is formally described by integrals of
products of three Bessel functions. We compare the performance of Adaptive
Optics correction when using natural, Sodium or Rayleigh laser guide stars. For
small diameter class telescopes (~5m), we show that a few number of Rayleigh
beacons can provide similar performance to that of a single Sodium laser, for a
lower overall cost of the instrument. For bigger apertures, using Rayleigh
stars may not be such a suitable alternative because of the too severe cone
effect that drastically degrades the quality of the correction.Comment: accepted for publication in JOS
De-biasing interferometric visibilities in VLTI-AMBER data of low SNR observations
AIMS: We have found that the interferometric visibilities of VLTI-AMBER
observations, extracted via the standard reduction package, are significantly
biased when faint targets are concerned. The visibility biases derive from a
time variable fringing effect (correlated noise) appearing on the detector.
METHODS: We have developed a method to correct this bias that consists in a
subtraction of the extra power due to such correlated noise, so that the real
power spectrum at the spatial frequencies of the fringing artifact can be
restored. RESULTS: This pre-processing procedure is implemented in a software,
called AMDC and available to the community, to be run before the standard
reduction package. Results obtained on simulated and real observations are
presented and discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
Estimating the phase in ground-based interferometry: performance comparison between single-mode and multimode schemes
In this paper we compare the performance of multi and single-mode
interferometry for the estimation of the phase of the complex visibility. We
provide a theoretical description of the interferometric signal which enables
to derive the phase error in presence of detector, photon and atmospheric
noises, for both multi and single-mode cases. We show that, despite the loss of
flux occurring when injecting the light in the single-mode component (i.e.
single-mode fibers, integrated optics), the spatial filtering properties of
such single-mode devices often enable higher performance than multimode
concepts. In the high flux regime speckle noise dominated, single-mode
interferometry is always more efficient, and its performance is significantly
better when the correction provided by adaptive optics becomes poor, by a
factor of 2 and more when the Strehl ratio is lower than 10%. In low light
level cases (detector noise regime), multimode interferometry reaches better
performance, yet the gain never exceeds 20%, which corresponds to the
percentage of photon loss due to the injection in the guides. Besides, we
demonstrate that single-mode interferometry is also more robust to the
turbulence in both cases of fringe tracking and phase referencing, at the
exception of narrow field of views (<1 arcsec).Comment: 9 pages (+ 11 online material appendices) -- 8 Figures. Accepted in
A&
AMBER on the VLTI: data processing and calibration issues
We present here the current performances of the AMBER / VLTI instrument for
standard use and compare these with the offered modes of the instrument. We
show that the instrument is able to reach its specified precision only for
medium and high spectral resolution modes, differential observables and bright
objects. For absolute observables, the current achievable accuracy is strongly
limited by the vibrations of the Unit Telescopes, and also by the observing
procedure which does not take into account the night-long transfer function
monitoring. For low-resolution mode, the current limitation is more in the data
reduction side, since several effects negligible at medium spectral resolution
are not taken into account in the current pipeline. Finally, for faint objects
(SNR around 1 per spectral channel), electromagnetic interferences in the VLTI
interferometric laboratory with the detector electronics prevents currently to
get unbiased measurements. Ideas are under study to correct in the data
processing side this effect, but a hardware fix should be investigated
seriously since it limits seriously the effective limiting magnitude of the
instrument.Comment: 10 page
Cerebral venous hemodynamic abnormalities in episodic and chronic migraine
Alterations of cerebral venous drainage have been demonstrated in chronic migraine (CM), suggesting that cerebral venous hemodynamic abnormalities (CVHAs) play a role in this condition. The aim of the present study was to look for a correlation between CM and CVHAs. We recruited 33 subjects suffering from CM with or without analgesic overuse, 29 episodic migraine (EM) patients with or without aura, and 21 healthy subjects as controls (HCs). CVHAs were evaluated by transcranial and extracranial echo-color Doppler evaluation of five venous hemodynamic parameters. CVHAs were significantly more frequent in the CM and EM patients than in the HCs. In the migraine patients, CVHAs were not correlated with clinical features. Cerebral venous hemodynamic abnormalities in episodic and chronic migraine The significantly greater frequency of CVHAs observed in the migraineurs may reflect a possible relationship between migraine and these abnormalities. Prospective longitudinal studies are needed to investigate whether CVHAs have a role in the processes of migraine chronification
Near-infrared interferometric observation of the Herbig Ae star HD144432 with VLTI/AMBER
We study the sub-AU-scale circumstellar environment of the Herbig Ae star
HD144432 with near-infrared (NIR) VLTI/AMBER observations to investigate the
structure of its inner dust disk. The interferometric observations were carried
out with the AMBER instrument in the H and K band. We interpret the measured H-
and K-band visibilities, the near- and mid-infrared visibilities from the
literature, and the SED of HD144432 by using geometric ring models and
ring-shaped temperature-gradient disk models with power-law temperature
distributions. We derived a K-band ring-fit radius of 0.17 \pm 0.01 AU and an
H-band radius of 0.18 \pm 0.01 AU (for a distance of 145 pc). This measured
K-band radius of \sim0.17 AU lies in the range between the dust sublimation
radius of \sim0.13 AU (predicted for a dust sublimation temperature of 1500 K
and gray dust) and the prediction of models including backwarming (\sim0.27
AU). We found that an additional extended halo component is required in both
the geometric and temperature-gradient modeling. In the best temperature-
gradient model, the disk consists of two components. The inner part of the disk
is a thin ring with an inner radius of \sim0.21 AU, a temperature of \sim1600
K, and a ring thickness \sim0.02 AU. The outer part extends from \sim1 AU to
\sim10 AU with an inner temperature of \sim400 K. We find that the disk is
nearly face-on with an inclination angle of < 28 degree. Our
temperature-gradient modeling suggests that the NIR excess is dominated by
emission from a narrow, bright rim located at the dust sublimation radius,
while an extended halo component contributes \sim6% to the total flux at 2
{\mu}m. The MIR model emission has a two-component structure with \sim20% flux
from the inner ring and the rest from the outer part. This two-component
structure suggests a disk gap, which is possibly caused by the shadow of a
puffed-up inner rim.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted by A&
Gas and dust in the inner disk of the Herbig Ae star MWC 758
In this Letter we investigate the origin of the near-infrared emission of the
Herbig Ae star MWC 758 on sub-astronomical unit (AU) scales using spectrally
dispersed low resolution (R=35) AMBER/VLTI interferometric observations both in
the H (m) and K (m) bands. We find that the K band
visibilities and closure phases are consistent with the presence of a dusty
disk inner rim located at the dust evaporation distance (0.4 AU) while the bulk
of the H band emission arises within 0.1 AU from the central star. Comparing
the observational results with theoretical model predictions, we suggest that
the H band emission is dominated by an hot gaseous accretion disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Data reduction for the AMBER instrument
We present here the general formalism and data processing steps used in the data reduction pipeline of the AMBER instrument. AMBER is a three-telescope interferometric beam combiner in J, H and K bands installed at ESO\'s Very Large Telescope Interferometer. The fringes obtained on the 3 pairs of telescopes are spatially coded and spectrally dispersed. These are monitored on a 512x512 infrared camera at frame rates up to 100 frames per second, and this paper presents the algorithm used to retrieve the complex coherent visibility of the science target and the subsequent squared visibility, dierential phase and phase closure on the 3 bases and in the 3 spectral bands available in AMBER
The 2008 outburst in the young stellar system ZCMa: I. Evidence of an enhanced bipolar wind on the AU-scale
Accretion is a fundamental process in star formation. Although the time
evolution of accretion remains a matter of debate, observations and modelling
studies suggest that episodic outbursts of strong accretion may dominate the
formation of the protostar. Observing young stellar objects during these
elevated accretion states is crucial to understanding the origin of unsteady
accretion. ZCMa is a pre-main-sequence binary system composed of an embedded
Herbig Be star, undergoing photometric outbursts, and a FU Orionis star. The
Herbig Be component recently underwent its largest optical photometric outburst
detected so far. We aim to constrain the origin of this outburst by studying
the emission region of the HI Brackett gamma line, a powerful tracer of
accretion/ejection processes on the AU-scale in young stars. Using the
AMBER/VLTI instrument at spectral resolutions of 1500 and 12 000, we performed
spatially and spectrally resolved interferometric observations of the hot gas
emitting across the Brackett gamma emission line, during and after the
outburst. From the visibilities and differential phases, we derive
characteristic sizes for the Brackett gamma emission and spectro-astrometric
measurements across the line, with respect to the continuum. We find that the
line profile, the astrometric signal, and the visibilities are inconsistent
with the signature of either a Keplerian disk or infall of matter. They are,
instead, evidence of a bipolar wind, maybe partly seen through a disk hole
inside the dust sublimation radius. The disappearance of the Brackett gamma
emission line after the outburst suggests that the outburst is related to a
period of strong mass loss rather than a change of the extinction along the
line of sight. Based on these conclusions, we speculate that the origin of the
outburst is an event of enhanced mass accretion, similar to those occuring in
EX Ors and FU Ors.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter
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