1. Recent progress at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
- Author
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S. Štefl, Gerd Hudepohl, Christian Choque-Cortez, Bertrand Bauvir, M. Dimmler, Nico Housen, Andrea Richichi, Serge Menardi, Vincent Suc, Stephane Guisard, Gautam Vasisht, Samuel Lévêque, Jason Spyromilio, Roberto Tamai, Christian A. Hummel, Andreas Kaufer, Fabio Caruso, Stefan Wehner, Juan Zagal, Emmanuel Galliano, Nicolas Haddad, Nicola Di Lieto, Mario Kiekebusch, Martin Vannier, Jean-Baptiste Le Bouquin, Leonardo Blanco-Lopez, Frederic Derie, Mark Ferrari, Henri Bonnet, Monika G. Petr-Gotzens, Andreas Glindemann, Javier Argomedo, Than Phan Duc, Stefan Sandrock, Yves Durand, Thomas Rivinius, Isabelle Percheron, Francoise Delplancke, Mario Tapia, Johan Carstens, Fabio Somboli, Serge Guniat, A. Ramirez, Fredrik T. Rantakyrö, Bertrand Koehler, Philippe B. Gitton, Michael Cantzler, Stephane Brillant, Markus Wittkowski, Bruno Gilli, Pierre Haguenauer, Christopher Lidman, Manfred Mornhinweg, Sebastien Morel, Pedro Mardones, Jean-Luc Nicoud, Markus Schöller, Florence Puech, and Anders Wallander
- Subjects
Scientific instrument ,Physics ,Interferometry ,Very Large Telescope ,Operation mode ,Astronomical optical interferometry ,MIDI ,Astronomical interferometer ,Aperture masking interferometry ,Astronomy ,computer.file_format ,computer ,Remote sensing - Abstract
The ESO Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) is the first general-user interferometer that offers near- and mid-infrared long-baseline interferometric observations in service and visitor mode to the whole astronomical community. Over the last two years, the VLTI has moved into its regular science operation mode with the two science instruments, MIDI and AMBER, both on all four 8m Unit Telescopes and the first three 1.8m Auxiliary Telescopes. We are currently devoting up to half of the available time for science, the rest is used for characterization and improvement of the existing system, plus additional installations. Since the first fringes with the VLTI on a star were obtained on March 17, 2001, there have been five years of scientific observations, with the different instruments, different telescopes and baselines. These observations have led so far to more than 40 refereed publications. We describe the current status of the VLTI and give an outlook for its near future.
- Published
- 2006