2 research outputs found

    Update on the performance of the MAGIC Intensity Interferometer

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    In recent years, the MAGIC telescopes have been equipped with a setup that allows its Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes (IACTs) to function as an Intensity Interferometer. The deadtime-free setup includes a 4-channel GPU-based real-time correlator together with optical filters in the 350-450 nm wavelength range and specialized Active Mirror Control (AMC) configurations. This implementation allows MAGIC to perform measurements of the spatial coherence (visibility) of the intensity fluctuations of an object’s starlight over several separations (baselines) and construct a model of said object. The accessible baseline range for MAGIC is ~40-90 m which translates into an angular resolution of 0.5-1 mas. Additionally, thanks to the AMC it can access even smaller baselines, of less than 17 m (which is the diameter of each of both dishes) to measure objects of greater angular size (>1 mas) and even measure the zero-baseline correlation, which is key to calibrate the system. We present the latest measurements that allow us to understand the performance and systematics of our setup and validate our analysis.ISSN:1824-803
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