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Phase Referencing in Optical Interferometry

Authors :
Filho, Mercedes E.
Garcia, Paulo
Duvert, Gilles
Duchene, Gaspard
Thiebaut, Eric
Young, John
Absil, Olivier
Berger, Jean-Phillipe
Beckert, Thomas
Hoenig, Sebastian
Schertl, Dieter
Weigelt, Gerd
Testi, Leonardo
Tatuli, Eric
Borkowski, Virginie
de Becker, Michael
Surdej, Jean
Aringer, Bernard
Hron, Joseph
Lebzelter, Thomas
Chiavassa, Andrea
Corradi, Romano
Harries, Tim
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

One of the aims of next generation optical interferometric instrumentation is to be able to make use of information contained in the visibility phase to construct high dynamic range images. Radio and optical interferometry are at the two extremes of phase corruption by the atmosphere. While in radio it is possible to obtain calibrated phases for the science objects, in the optical this is currently not possible. Instead, optical interferometry has relied on closure phase techniques to produce images. Such techniques allow only to achieve modest dynamic ranges. However, with high contrast objects, for faint targets or when structure detail is needed, phase referencing techniques as used in radio interferometry, should theoretically achieve higher dynamic ranges for the same number of telescopes. Our approach is not to provide evidence either for or against the hypothesis that phase referenced imaging gives better dynamic range than closure phase imaging. Instead we wish to explore the potential of this technique for future optical interferometry and also because image reconstruction in the optical using phase referencing techniques has only been performed with limited success. We have generated simulated, noisy, complex visibility data, analogous to the signal produced in radio interferometers, using the VLTI as a template. We proceeded with image reconstruction using the radio image reconstruction algorithms contained in AIPS IMAGR (CLEAN algorithm). Our results show that image reconstruction is successful in most of our science cases, yielding images with a 4 milliarcsecond resolution in K band. (abridged)<br />Comment: 11 pages, 36 figures

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.0810.0545
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.787908