Physics – Optics
Scientific paper
Sep 2002
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2002eso..pres...16.&link_type=abstract
ESO Press Release, 09/2002
Physics
Optics
Scientific paper
VLT Interferometer Passes Another Technical Hurdle
Summary
During the nights of September 15/16 and 16/17, 2002, preliminary tests were successfully carried out during which the light beams from all four VLT 8.2-m Unit Telescopes (UTs) at the ESO Paranal Observatory were successively combined, two by two, to produce interferometric fringes . This marks a next important step towards the full implementation of the VLT Interferometer (VLTI) that will ultimately provide European astronomers with unequalled opportunities for exciting front-line research projects.
It is no simple matter to ensure that the quartet of ANTU, KUEYEN, MELIPAL and YEPUN , each a massive giant with a suite of computer-controlled active mirrors, can work together by sending beams of light towards a common focal point via a complex system of compensating optics. Yet, in the span of only two nights, the four VLT telescopes were successfully "paired" to do exactly this, yielding a first tantalizing glimpse of the future possibilities with this new science machine.
While there is still a long way ahead to the routine production of extremely sharp, interferometric images, the present test observations have allowed to demonstrate directly the 2D-resolution capacity of the VLTI by means of multiple measurements of a distant star.
Much valuable experience was gained during those two nights and the ESO engineers and scientists are optimistic that the extensive test observations with the numerous components of the VLTI will continue to progress rapidly. Five intense, technical test periods are scheduled during the next six months; some of these with the Mid-Infrared interferometric instrument for the VLTI (MIDI) which will soon be installed at Paranal.
Later in 2003, the first of the four moveable VLTI 1.8-m Auxiliary Telescopes (ATs) will be put in place on the top of the mountain; together they will permit regular interferometric observations, also without having to use the large UTs.
PR Photo 22a/02 : Delay Lines in the Interferometric Tunnel. PR Photo 22b/02 : Baselines and "Interferometric PSF" from observations of the star Achernar . Combining the VLT telescopes
ESO PR Photo 22a/02
ESO PR Photo 22a/02
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Caption : PR Photo 22a/02 : VLT Delay Lines in the Interferometric Tunnel.
Less than one year after the first combination of two 8.2-m VLT telescopes - described in detail in ESO Press Release 23/01 - successful tests have now been carried out, during which all of the four telescopes were combined pairwise in rapid succession .
Of the six combinations possible (ANTU-KUEYEN, ANTU-MELIPAL, ANTU-YEPUN, KUEYEN-MELIPAL, KUEYEN-YEPUN and MELIPAL-YEPUN), only the last one could not be used, because of the current geometrical configuration of the three delay lines installed so far.
The combination of the light beams from two (or more) VLT Unit Telescopes is a daunting task. It involves pointing them simultaneously towards the same celestial object, ensuring optimal optical adjustment of the computer-controlled telescope mirrors (including the shape of the 8.2-m primary mirror by "active optics"), performing extremely smooth and stable tracking of the object as the Earth turns, guiding the light beams via additional ("coudé") mirrors into the "delay lines" installed in the Interferometric Tunnel below the telescope platform, keeping the total path lengths equal to within a fraction of a micron during hours at a time and finally, to register the interferometric fringes at the focal point of the VINCI instrument [1], where the light beams encounter each other.
Next year, the first adaptive optics systems for the VLTI will be inserted below the telescopes. By drastically reducing the smearing effects of the turbulent atmosphere through which the light has to pass before it enters the telescopes, this will further "stabilize" the imaging and increase the sensitivity of the VLTI by a factor of almost 100. First results with four Unit Telescopes
ESO PR Photo 22b/02
ESO PR Photo 22b/02
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Caption : PR Photo 22b/02 : The left panel shows the rather incomplete set of "baselines" used during the present, short interferometric test exposures (in interferometric terminology: the "UV-plane coverage"). Each baseline is represented by two opposite, short arcs, symmetric around the origin (centre) of the diagram. The colour-coded pattern reflects the telescope pairs (ANTU-KUEYEN = magenta, ANTU-MELIPAL = red, ANTU-YEPUN = green, KUEYEN-MELIPAL = cyan, KUEYEN-YEPUN = blue), as seen from the observed object. Due to the limited time available, this distribution is far from uniform and is quite elongated in one direction. To the right is shown the reconstructed, two-dimensional interferometric point-spread function (PSF) of the star Achernar (in "negative" - with most light in the darkest areas). It is the result of subsequent computer processing of the measurements with the different baselines. On the largest scale, the image consists of an inner, round distribution of light, 0.057 arcsec wide, surrounded by an outer, much weaker, broad "ring" and with a "white" zone between these two areas. This is the "Airy disk" for a single 8.2-m telescope at this infrared wavelength (the K-band at 2.2 µm). It represents the maximum resolution (image sharpness) obtainable when observing with a single telescope. As explained in the text, the interferometric "addition" of more telescopes greatly improves that resolution. The width of the individual - slightly S-shaped - lines ("fringes") in the inclined pattern visible in the inner area, about 0.003 arcsec, represents the achieved interferometric resolution in one direction (with an angular diameter of about 0.002 arcsec, the disk of Achernar is not resolved, making it a suitable object for this resolution test). The resolution in the perpendicular direction (along the lines) is evidently less - this is due to the specific (elongated) baseline pattern during these test observations (left panel). The image provides a direct illustration of the 20-fold increase in resolution of the VLTI over a single 8.2-m telescope .
At this moment, three delay lines have been installed, but for the present first test, the VLTI engineers and astronomers used the telescopes in pairs, in order to set-up the various equipment configurations properly. In this way, they could also start "teaching" the computer control software to handle this very demanding process as efficiently and user-friendly as possible in the future. With the arrival of the science instrument AMBER in mid-2003, up to three beams can be combined simultaneously.
It turned out that the various predictions of mirror positions and angles were quite accurate and only a moderate amount of time was needed to "obtain fringes" in all different configurations. Measurements were then made on a number of stars, among them the brightest star in the southern constellation Eridanus (The River), known as Alpha Eridani or Achernar , that was observed several times with the different telescope pairings. This star is a hot dwarf (spectral type "B5 IV") that is located at a distance of about 145 light-years. It has also been extensively observed during earlier VLTI tests. It is a very suitable object for the present resolution tests as its angular diameter is only about 0.002 arcsec and it therefore remains unresolved at the near-infrared wavelength of the K-band used (2.2 µm).
In fact, the combination of these data (including also some that were obtained in October 2001) now makes it possible to reconstruct the first interferometric "point-spread function (PSF)" of a star obtained with the VLTI , cf. PR Photo 22b/02 . This is like an "interferometric image", except that the disk of this particular star remains unresolved.
The angular resolution is inversely proportional to the aperture of a telescope for single telescope observation, and to the length of the "baseline" between
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