143 research outputs found
Long-baseline optical intensity interferometry: Laboratory demonstration of diffraction-limited imaging
A long-held vision has been to realize diffraction-limited optical aperture
synthesis over kilometer baselines. This will enable imaging of stellar
surfaces and their environments, and reveal interacting gas flows in binary
systems. An opportunity is now opening up with the large telescope arrays
primarily erected for measuring Cherenkov light in air induced by gamma rays.
With suitable software, such telescopes could be electronically connected and
also used for intensity interferometry. Second-order spatial coherence of light
is obtained by cross correlating intensity fluctuations measured in different
pairs of telescopes. With no optical links between them, the error budget is
set by the electronic time resolution of a few nanoseconds. Corresponding
light-travel distances are approximately one meter, making the method
practically immune to atmospheric turbulence or optical imperfections,
permitting both very long baselines and observing at short optical wavelengths.
Previous theoretical modeling has shown that full images should be possible to
retrieve from observations with such telescope arrays. This project aims at
verifying diffraction-limited imaging experimentally with groups of detached
and independent optical telescopes. In a large optics laboratory, artificial
stars were observed by an array of small telescopes. Using high-speed
photon-counting solid-state detectors, intensity fluctuations were
cross-correlated over up to 180 baselines between pairs of telescopes,
producing coherence maps across the interferometric Fourier-transform plane.
These measurements were used to extract parameters about the simulated stars,
and to reconstruct their two-dimensional images. As far as we are aware, these
are the first diffraction-limited images obtained from an optical array only
linked by electronic software, with no optical connections between the
telescopes.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press. arXiv admin
note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1407.599
Stellar intensity interferometry: Optimizing air Cherenkov telescope array layouts
Kilometric-scale optical imagers seem feasible to realize by intensity
interferometry, using telescopes primarily erected for measuring Cherenkov
light induced by gamma rays. Planned arrays envision 50--100 telescopes,
distributed over some 1--4 km. Although array layouts and telescope sizes
will primarily be chosen for gamma-ray observations, also their interferometric
performance may be optimized. Observations of stellar objects were numerically
simulated for different array geometries, yielding signal-to-noise ratios for
different Fourier components of the source images in the interferometric
-plane. Simulations were made for layouts actually proposed for future
Cherenkov telescope arrays, and for subsets with only a fraction of the
telescopes. All large arrays provide dense sampling of the -plane due to
the sheer number of telescopes, irrespective of their geographic orientation or
stellar coordinates. However, for improved coverage of the -plane and a
wider variety of baselines (enabling better image reconstruction), an exact
east-west grid should be avoided for the numerous smaller telescopes, and
repetitive geometric patterns avoided for the few large ones. Sparse arrays
become severely limited by a lack of short baselines, and to cover
astrophysically relevant dimensions between 0.1--3 milliarcseconds in visible
wavelengths, baselines between pairs of telescopes should cover the whole
interval 30--2000 m.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures; presented at the SPIE conference "Optical and
Infrared Interferometry II", San Diego, CA, USA (June 2010
Stellar Intensity Interferometry: Astrophysical targets for sub-milliarcsecond imaging
Intensity interferometry permits very long optical baselines and the
observation of sub-milliarcsecond structures. Using planned 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, inviting detailed studies of the shapes of rapidly rotating hot
stars with structures in their circumstellar disks and winds, or mapping out
patterns of nonradial pulsations across stellar surfaces. Signal-to-noise in
intensity interferometry 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. Prime candidate sources have been
identified among classes of bright and hot stars. Observations are simulated
for telescope configurations envisioned for large Cherenkov facilities,
synthesizing numerous optical baselines in software, confirming that
resolutions of tens of microarcseconds are feasible for numerous astrophysical
targets.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; presented at the SPIE conference "Optical and
Infrared Interferometry II", San Diego, CA, USA (June 2010
Optical aperture synthesis with electronically connected telescopes
Highest resolution imaging in astronomy is achieved by interferometry,
connecting telescopes over increasingly longer distances, and at successively
shorter wavelengths. Here, we present the first diffraction-limited images in
visual light, produced by an array of independent optical telescopes, connected
electronically only, with no optical links between them. With an array of small
telescopes, second-order optical coherence of the sources is measured through
intensity interferometry over 180 baselines between pairs of telescopes, and
two-dimensional images reconstructed. The technique aims at diffraction-limited
optical aperture synthesis over kilometre-long baselines to reach resolutions
showing details on stellar surfaces and perhaps even the silhouettes of
transiting exoplanets. Intensity interferometry circumvents problems of
atmospheric turbulence that constrain ordinary interferometry. Since the
electronic signal can be copied, many baselines can be built up between
dispersed telescopes, and over long distances. Using arrays of air Cherenkov
telescopes, this should enable the optical equivalent of interferometric arrays
currently operating at radio wavelengths.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; published under open access in Nature
Communications, http://www.nature.com/ncomms
Imaging sub-milliarcsecond stellar features with intensity interferometry using air Cherenkov telescope arrays
Recent proposals have been advanced to apply imaging air Cherenkov telescope
arrays to stellar intensity interferometry (SII). Of particular interest is the
possibility of model-independent image recovery afforded by the good (u,
v)-plane coverage of these arrays, as well as recent developments in phase
retrieval techniques. The capabilities of these instruments used as SII
receivers have already been explored for simple stellar objects, and here the
focus is on reconstructing stellar images with non-uniform radiance
distributions. We find that hot stars (T > 6000 K) containing hot and/or cool
localized regions (T \sim 500 K) as small as \sim 0.1 mas can be imaged at
short wavelengths ({\lambda} = 400 nm).Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 6 pages, 10 figure
High angular resolution imaging with stellar intensity interferometry using air Cherenkov telescope arrays
Optical stellar intensity interferometry with air Cherenkov telescope arrays,
composed of nearly 100 telescopes, will provide means to measure fundamental
stellar parameters and also open the possibility of model-independent imaging.
In addition to sensitivity issues, a main limitation of image recovery in
intensity interferometry is the loss of phase of the complex degree of
coherence during the measurement process. Nevertheless, several
model-independent phase reconstruction techniques have been developed. Here we
implement a Cauchy-Riemann based algorithm to recover images from simulated
data. For bright stars (m_v~6) and exposure times of a few hours, we find that
scale features such as diameters, oblateness and overall shapes are
reconstructed with uncertainties of a few percent. More complex images are also
well reconstructed with high degrees of correlation with the pristine image.
Results are further improved by using a forward algorithm.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 13 pages, 22 figure
Optical Intensity Interferometry with the Cherenkov Telescope Array
With its unprecedented light-collecting area for night-sky observations, the
Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) holds great potential for also optical stellar
astronomy, in particular as a multi-element intensity interferometer for
realizing imaging with sub-milliarcsecond angular resolution. Such an
order-of-magnitude increase of the spatial resolution achieved in optical
astronomy will reveal the surfaces of rotationally flattened stars with
structures in their circumstellar disks and winds, or the gas flows between
close binaries. Image reconstruction is feasible from the second-order
coherence of light, measured as the temporal correlations of arrival times
between photons recorded in different telescopes. This technique (once
pioneered by Hanbury Brown and Twiss) connects telescopes only with electronic
signals and is practically insensitive to atmospheric turbulence and to
imperfections in telescope optics. Detector and telescope requirements are very
similar to those for imaging air Cherenkov observatories, the main difference
being the signal processing (calculating cross correlations between single
camera pixels in pairs of telescopes). Observations of brighter stars are not
limited by sky brightness, permitting efficient CTA use during also bright-Moon
periods. While other concepts have been proposed to realize kilometer-scale
optical interferometers of conventional amplitude (phase-) type, both in space
and on the ground, their complexity places them much further into the future
than CTA, which thus could become the first kilometer-scale optical imager in
astronomy.Comment: Astroparticle Physics, in press; 47 pages, 10 figures, 124 reference
Stellar Intensity Interferometry: Prospects for sub-milliarcsecond optical imaging
Using kilometric arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, intensity interferometry
may increase the spatial resolution in optical astronomy by an order of
magnitude, enabling images of rapidly rotating stars with structures in their
circumstellar disks and winds, or mapping out patterns of nonradial pulsations
across stellar surfaces. Intensity interferometry (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 with very fast detectors are
becoming available as arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, distributed over a
few square km. Digital signal handling enables very many baselines to be
synthesized, while stars are tracked with electronic time delays, thus
synthesizing an optical interferometer in software. Simulated observations
indicate limiting magnitudes around m(v)=8, reaching resolutions ~30
microarcsec 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 provides the modulus (but not phase) of any spatial
frequency component of the source image; for this reason image reconstruction
requires phase retrieval techniques, feasible if sufficient coverage of the
interferometric (u,v)-plane is available. Experiments are in progress; test
telescopes have been erected, and trials in 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.Comment: New Astronomy Reviews, in press; 101 pages, 11 figures, 185
reference
- …