Speckle observations of binary stars with a 0.5 m telescope

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics

Scientific paper

10.1086/497157

We present 36 observations of 17 visual binaries of moderate separation (range from 0.15'' to 0.79'') made with the 50 cm Cassegrain telescope of the Jagiellonian University in Cracow. The speckle interferometry technique was combined with modest optical hardware and a standard photometric CCD camera. We used broad-band V,R,I filters without a Risley prism to reduce differential colour refraction, so we performed model analysis to investigate the influence of this effect on the results of measurements. For binary components of spectral type O-F, the difference of three spectral classes between them should bias their relative positions by no more than a couple of tens of milliarcseconds (mas) for moderate zenith distances. The statistical analysis of our results confirmed this conclusion. A cross-spectrum approach was applied to resolve the quadrant ambiguity. Our separations have RMS deviations of 0.012'' and our position angles have RMS deviations of 1.8 deg. Relative photometry in V, R and I filters appeared to be the less accurately determined parameter. We discuss our errors in detail and compare them to other speckle data. This comparison clearly shows the high value of our measurements. We also present an example of the enhancement of image resolution for an extended object of angular size greater than the atmospheric coherence patch using speckle interferometry techniques.

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