File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  • Find it @ UNIST can give you direct access to the published full text of this article. (UNISTARs only)
Related Researcher

김재영

Kim, Jae-Young
Observational Astrophysics Lab
Read More

Views & Downloads

Detailed Information

Cited time in webofscience Cited time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

OPTICAL MULTI-CHANNEL INTENSITY INTERFEROMETRY OR: HOW TO RESOLVE O-STARS IN THE MAGELLANIC CLOUDS

Author(s)
Trippe, SaschaKim, Jae-YoungLee, BangwonChoi, ChangsuOh, JunghwanLee, TaeseokYoon, Sung-ChulIm, MyungshinPark, Yong-Sun
Issued Date
2014-12
DOI
10.5303/JKAS.2014.47.6.235
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/83984
Citation
JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, v.47, no.6, pp.235 - 253
Abstract
Intensity interferometry, based on the Hanbury Brown-Twiss effect, is a simple and inexpensive method for optical interferometry at microarcsecond angular resolutions; its use in astronomy was abandoned in the 1970s because of low sensitivity. Motivated by recent technical developments, we argue that the sensitivity of large modern intensity interferometers can be improved by factors up to approximately 25000, corresponding to 11 photometric magnitudes, compared to the pioneering Narrabri Stellar Interferometer. This is made possible by (i) using avalanche photodiodes (APD) as light detectors, (ii) distributing the light received from the source over multiple independent spectral channels, and (iii) use of arrays composed of multiple large light collectors. Our approach permits the construction of large (with baselines ranging from few kilometers to intercontinental distances) optical interferometers at the cost of (very) long-baseline radio interferometers. Realistic intensity interferometer designs are able to achieve limiting R-band magnitudes as good as m(R) approximate to 14, sufficient for spatially resolved observations of main-sequence O-type stars in the Magellanic Clouds. Multi-channel intensity interferometers can address a wide variety of science cases: (i) linear radii, effective temperatures, and luminosities of stars, via direct measurements of stellar angular sizes; (ii) mass-radius relationships of compact stellar remnants, via direct measurements of the angular sizes of white dwarfs; (iii) stellar rotation, via observations of rotation flattening and surface gravity darkening; (iv) stellar convection and the interaction of stellar photospheres and magnetic fields, via observations of dark and bright starspots; (v) the structure and evolution Of multiple stars, via mapping of the companion stars and of accretion flows in interacting binaries; (vi) direct measurements of interstellar distances, derived from angular diameters of stars or via the interferometric Baade-Wesselink method; (vii) the physics of gas accretion onto supermassive black holes, via resolved observations of the central engines of luminous active galactic nuclei; and (viii) calibration of amplitude interferometers by providing a sample of calibrator stars.
Publisher
KOREAN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
ISSN
1225-4614
Keyword (Author)
Instrumentation: interferometersTechniques: interferometric
Keyword
STELLAR INTERFEROMETERPRESUPERNOVA EVOLUTIONANGULAR DIAMETERSUPDATED CATALOGMAIN-SEQUENCEMASSIVE STARSTELESCOPESYSTEMFLUCTUATIONSRESOLUTION

qrcode

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.