Telescope Systems Scientist
Carnegie Jun 2024
X
The Array is capable of resolving details as small as 200 micro-arcseconds, equivalent to the angular size of a nickel (0,20€) coin seen from a distance of 10,000 miles (16,000 km).
Preliminary planning: 1985
engineering studies: 1992
Georgia State $5.6-million 5-telescope array: 1994
NSF capital investment to nearly $6.3-million.
University has provided matching funds in a similar amount.
Ground broken: 1996
Keck Foundation $1.5-million to add a 6th telescope: 1998
First fringes: 1999
The Array achieved starlight fringes on its 331-meter baseline, the longest baseline (by a factor of three) ever achieved by an optical interferometer: 2000
>250 refereed publications
TelAO
LabAO
WFS
phase
DM
image
phase
image
MIRX
MYSTIC
SILMARIL
SPICA
CHARIOT
PAVO
VIS BEAMS
METROLOGY
STS/STST
BEAM SAMPLERS
BEAM Reduction
LabAO
1850s
1890s
1920 - measured Betelgeuse (with Pease)
1956 - HBT effect, correlation b/t coherent photons
Intensity interferometry
TMT
GMT
16x sharper than Hubble ... but CHARA is 17x sharper than ELT
Image credit: ESO
diameter
Limb darkened vs Uniform disk
binarity
Lawson 2003, S&T
Separation
flux ratio
(B/λ)
These "closure phases" also yield information about source symmetry
Combine the phases measured in a closed triangle of three telescopes in a way that cancels out the atmospheric turbulence.
symmetry
Spectrally dispersed fringes produce differential visibilities and differential phases
Differential Vis and Differential Phases
Star + disk.
up to 331m
Spatial resolution
• 0.20 mas at R (650 nm)
• 0.52 mas at H (1.67 μm)
• 0.66 mas at K (2.13 μm)
34 to 331m
1100m
600m
~17m
S3
S4
W5
Max spatial resolution
• 0.06 mas at R (650 nm)
• 0.16 mas at H (1.67 μm)
• 0.20 mas at K (2.13 μm)
17 to 1100m
The full Michelson Array would offer
12 total positions, creating 66 possible baselines.
(CHARA Michelson Array Pathfinder)
Mobile Telescope Transport (TR116)
Ligon et al. 2022
S4
S3
ALOHA – Univ. Limoges
Single-mode PM fibers
λ=810 nm, 240 m long
Laying on the ground
Connect S1+S2
On-sky fringes
Magri, Grossard, Reynaud et al. (submitted)
CMAP
Single-mode PM fibers
λ=1.6 μm, 650 m long
Trench: 18 inches deep
Narcissus Mirror for SILMARIL
up to 300 nights over three years of open access time via NOIRLab.
Snapshot Imaging Mode to encourage new investigations.
Goal:
Image exoplanet during transit
There are some 250 known exoplanets with host stars accessible to CHARA.
The new baselines will enable resolution of solar-like stars out to about 70pc in H-band. Numerical simulations of the transiting hot-Jupiter in HD189773 indicate that the shape of the silhouette of the planet can be measured in long baseline observations made during transits.
The Gaia orbits give the center-of-light motion of unresolved binaries, and a single resolved CHARA observation is sufficient to determine the full orbit and masses.
High angular resolution observations also reveal how interacting stars are transformed by mass exchange.
Ashley Elliott 2024
Stellar angular diameters are key to the determination of stellar radii (w/ distance) and Teff (with a known bolometric flux).
Ashley Elliott (Louisiana State University) has compiled interferometric measurements from CHARA and elsewhere to create an empirical HR diagram
(presented at AAS special session in New Orleans, 2024).
693 stars, σθ < 5%
Ang. Dia. + Parallax → Linear Radius
Diameter + Bolometric Flux → Effective Temperature
Spotted magnetic stars
Regulus -- Che et al. 2011, ApJ, 732, 68
Rasalhague -- Zhao et al. 2009, ApJ, 701, 209
Altair -- Monnier et al. 2007, Science, 317, 324
Alderamin -- Zhao et al. 2009, ApJ, 701, 209
Beta Cas -- Che et al. 2011, ApJ, 732, 68
Rapid Rotators
Zet And
Sig Gem
Lam And
θ = 2.7 mas
θ = 2.5 mas
θ = 2.4 mas
Expansion curve of Nova Del 2013.
AAVSO, Hopkins et al. (2012)
Image Reconstruction of AZ Cyg
Norris et al. (2021)
Model Simulation
Chiavassa et al. (2010)
P = 12.9 d
a = 0.87 mas
Be stars
Giant star surfaces
Gleise 486
Interferometric observations of exoplanet host stars provide the means to determine the detailed
stellar characteristics that are required to find the exoplanet properties.
Planet formation is generally considered in the context of young stars, but mass loss in older stars may also play a role in making planets at the end of a star's life.
post-AGB star AC Her
Anugu determined the first 3D orbit for AC Her
→ found that the large cavity in the center of the circumbinary disk is not created by the tidal action of the central binary.
If so, represents the first example of a polar circumbinary planet.
Mass loss plays a central role in the final evolutionary stages of massive stars, and
with the Great Dimming of Betelgeuse in 2019 -- 2020 there is a renewed interest in episodic mass loss events that occur in luminous supergiants.
The cool hypergiant star RW Cep experienced a similar but longer duration Great Dimming event in 2022:
Patchy appearance results from dust created by a huge ejection from the star
What causes 1.2 mag
drop in V-band flux?
Illustration credit: NASA, ESA, and E. Wheatley (STScI)
Anugu and colleagues are continuing to monitor the star with CHARA to explore how the surface appearance changes as the star brightens again.
The disks around T Tau type and other Young Stellar Objects (YSOs) are the birthplaces of planets, and interferometric imaging offers important clues about the environments surrounding planet formation.
SU Aur
MIRC-X observations of to build a model of the circumstellar disk's geometric and physical properties.
The process of planet formation involves the development of instabilities in the disk that can be followed through time series interferometric observations at very high angular resolutions.
luminous Herbig Be star HD 190073
V1925 Aql
new results from the ARMADA survey to search for triple systems among known intermediate mass binaries.
new orbits of 12 companions around early F- to B-type binaries,
Complementary radial velocity measurements for some of these systems yield very reliable mass estimates.
The origin of the rapid spin of the emission line Be stars is a long-standing mystery
that may involve prior mass transfer in an interacting binary.
These companions are the stripped-down remnants of the former, more massive companion that transferred mass and angular momentum to the Be star through Roche lobe overflow.
The stripped stars are hot and faint, and some have been detected through UV spectroscopy (Wang 2021).
Klement made 3D orbits through combined spectroscopic and astrometric orbit fitting to determine stellar masses at this hitherto unseen stage of binary star evolution (see the case of HR 2142).
NGC 4151
Kishimoto suceeded in obtaining fringes with CHARA Classic on the bright central region of the active galactic nucleus of the Seyfert galxy NGC 4151.
Lanthermann et al. 2022
MIRC-X disperses light across several spectral channels and operates in the J and H-bands. MYSTIC operates in the K-band. MIRC-X/MYSTIC can be used simultaneously to create images of stellar surfaces and circumstellar disks. The precision closure phases are well suited to detecting faint binary companions.
Three spectral modes are currently available in the H-band: prism R=50 (8 spectral channels), prism R=102, and grism R=190. A higher resolution grism with R=1170 is available (with approval)
STS and STST
Anugu 2020
MYSTIC, the Michigan Young STar Imager at CHARA is a K-band, cryogenic, 6-beam combiner. All-in-One 6T or high sensitivity 4T gravity chip
A 4-telescope mode for MYSTIC using an integrated optics component designed for the VLTI-GRAVITY experiment is under development and will provide better sensitivity for the faintest targets.
MYSTIC is available in the K-band using a low-resolution R=49 prism. Additional spectra modes (prism R=22, grism R=278, grism R=981, grism R=1724)
Setterholm et al. 2023
Pannetier et al. 2021
(Stellar Parameters and Imaging with a Cophased Array)
SPICA-FT H-band 6-beam ABCD combiner by VLC Photonics, inspired by GRAVITY
low-resolution mode uses MIRC-X for fringe-tracking
The goal of the SPICA project is to provide a large and homogeneous set of stellar parameters across the HR-diagram. The survey aims to measure the angular diameters of 1000 stars.
Low-resolution spectrograph for measuring precise angular diameters (R=150, 50 channels over 650–950 nm).
For a sub-sample of bright stars, medium (R=4300) and high (R=13,200) spectral resolution modes will be available for spectral imaging of stellar surfaces and environments and kinematic studies.
spectrograph
Currently have two injection stages
(CHARA Array Integrated Optics Testbed)
collaboration with Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP)
ULI optics for JHK bands
(Siliprandi, Labadie, Madhav, Dinkelaker, Thompson, Benoît)
Charting Quantum Horizons March 2024 - Tucson, AZ
relation semimajor-axis (a) and the period (T)
masses of objects
use this to calibrate Mass-Luminosity relationship for single stars
stellar masses
stellar radii
stellar ages
fundamental astrophysics
up to 140m
but in atmosphere, turbulent cells limit resolution to
a method to obtain diffraction-limited resolution across the full aperture of a large telescope
long exposure
speckles blur
produce Airy pattern
true images are impossible, only centrosymmetric objects can be reconstructed, but later work fixed this (mostly)
speckle pattern is the Fourier transform of telescope pupil
autocorrelation of speckles
(in Fourier space)
modulus
(time-averaged intensity)
following slides stolen from EXOPAG 23:
Some thoughts from AAS 241
~50% of the stars you see are binaries
~25% are triples
-on avg there's an exoplanet per star
~10% of Sun-like stars likely host rocky exoplanets, more for lower-mass stars
-40-50% of Kepler/K2/TESS objects of interest may have companions
-biases occurrence rates & underestimates exoplanet radii by 50%
<0.08
0.08-0.4
0.4-8
>8
>20
>3
1.4-3
>1.4
Solar Masses
Oxygen
Fringe spacing
Fringe orientation
Fringe Depth (contrast)
Binary separation
Binary position angle
Binary magnitude difference
(delta mag)
relation semimajor-axis (a) and the period (T)
masses of objects
wide binary
close binary
vs
:
:
vs
:
use this to calibrate Mass-Luminosity relationship for single stars
(CHARA Array Integrated Optics Testbed)
collaboration with Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP)
ULI optics for JHK bands
(Siliprandi, Labadie, Madhav, Dinkelaker, Thompson, Benoît)
Coupling ratio evolutions of (input coupling waveguide) and R2(λ) in blue diamonds of a writing beam combiner characterized by coupling input light in the two external PT1 and PT2 inputs to obtain two experimental measurements of the 3 dB asymmetric directional coupler (a, b) and one for each photometric asymmetric Tap directional couplers, as Tap 1 (c) and Tap 2 (d)
Siliprandi et al. 2022
flux
spectra
position
wavefront
What can we measure from light?
Old but interesting. Perhaps a reader is ready to modernize the list?? I believe this is from Shapley's book "Beyond the Observatory."
******************
“Thirty Deductions from a Glimmer of Starlight”
Harlow Shapley
… let us return to a consideration of what modern astronomers can find out about a single star. I shall list here thirty facts that we can now deduce from appropriate studies of a single star image. The first eighteen of these facts can be discovered about any star.
1. The position in the sky with reference to other stars.
2. The apparent magnitude (brightness) with reference to stellar or artificial standards.
3. The color index (found by comparing the brightness in various spectrum intervals—that is, measuring the color tint: reddish, yellowish, greenish, or bluish).
4. The variability in light; it may be zero.
5. The spectral class in two dimensions.
6. The variability, if any, in spectral class.
7. The chemical composition of the stellar atmosphere and the consequent nature of the atomic transformations that maintain the radiation.
8. The approximate age.
9. Whether it is a single or double (found in various ways).
10. The existence and strength of its magnetic field.
11. The involvement with interstellar nebulosity.
12. The speed of rotation.
13. The tilt of the rotational axis.
14. The speed in the line of sight, and variations, regular or irregular in that speed.
15. The cross motion—measurable only if the distance of the star is small or the speed is great.
16. The surface temperature.
17. The total luminosity (candle power).
18. The diameter.
The next eight facts can also be learned if the star is an eclipsing binary—a double star whose light varies because the two members of the system periodically eclipse each other.
1. The mean density of the two components.
2. The period of revolution.
3. The geometry of the eclipse—and whether it is total or partial.
4. The degree of darkening at the lib.
5. The ratio of the sizes of the two components.
6. The eccentricity of the relative orbit.
7. The inclination of the orbital plane.
8. The approximate distance.
And about a Cepheid variable—a star that varies in light periodically because of pulsations—four additional facts can be found.
1. The shape of the light curve.
2. The period of pulsation.
3. The population of membership.
4. The approximate distance.
magnetic fields
For many stars, we can now add: the frequencies and amplitudes of its oscillations (asteroseismology)
presence of planets
Let's consider the state-of-the-art in "single star images" - resolved interferometric imaging in the optical can yield:
* Stellar shapes - eg. particularly oblateness for rapid rotators
* Surface brightness distribution - including star spots, stellar limb darkening, gravity darkening
* Interior temperature structure of the upper atmosphere (by inverting the limb darkening)
* For rapid rotators, gravity darkening can directly indicate the degree of convective versus radiative energy transfer
* And the star spots can make Bryan happy by giving insight into magnetic fields 😎