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Offline, multidetector intensity interferometers – II. Implications and applications
Aviv Ofir 1★ and Erez N. Ribak 2
  1 Astronomy Department, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel   2 Physics Department, Technion, Haifa 32000, Israel
Correspondence to   E-mail: avivofir@wise.tau.ac.il
Copyright 2006 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2006 RAS
KEYWORDS
instrumentation: high angular resolution • instrumentation: interferometers • techniques: interferometric

ABSTRACT

Intensity interferometry removes the stringent requirements on mechanical precision and atmospheric corrections that plague all amplitude interferometry techniques at the cost of severely limited sensitivity. A new idea we recently introduced, very high redundancy, alleviates this problem. It enables the relatively simple construction (∼1 cm mechanical precision) of a ground-based astronomical facility able to transform a two-dimensional field of point-like sources to a three-dimensional distribution of microarcsec resolved systems, each imaged in several optical bands. Each system will also have its high-resolution residual timing, high-quality (inside each band) spectra and light curve, emergent flux, effective temperature, polarization effects and perhaps some thermodynamic properties, all directly measured. All the above attributes can be measured in a single observation run of such a dedicated facility. We conclude that after three decades of abandonment, optical intensity interferometry deserves another review, also as a ground-based alternative to the science goals of space interferometers.


Accepted 2006 March 3. Received 2006 January 26; in original form 2005 December 15

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10276.x About DOI

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