We present the current status of the I2C stellar intensity interferometer used towards high angular resolution observations of stars in visible wavelengths. In these proceedings, we present recent technical improvements to the instrument, and share results from ongoing campaigns using arrays of small diameter optical telescopes. A tip-tilt adaptive optics unit was integrated into the optical system to stabilize light injection into an optical fiber. The setup was successfully tested with several facilities on the Calern Plateau site of the Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur. These include one of the 1m diameter telescopes of the C2PU observatory, a portable 1m diameter telescope, and also the 1.5m MéO telescope. To better constrain on-sky measurements, the spectral transmission of instrument was characterized in the laboratory using a high resolution spectrograph. The system was also tested with two of the auxiliary telescopes of the VLTI resulting in successful temporal and spatial correlation measurements of three stars.
We propose a method to transform a Cherenkov telescope, primarily designed for gamma-ray astronomy, into an imaging telescope at the diffraction limit of an equivalent astronomical telescope. The method can be applied onto existing and planned Cherenkov telescopes, both taken as a single dish or a set of such telescopes configured for aperture synthesis operating as intensity interferometers. We examine the sensitivity of our method by performing extensive numerical simulations including two and three point correlations, for amplitude and closure phase quantities permitting image reconstruction of stellar surfaces with subtle structures in the range of milli-arc-second resolutions. As a case of study we apply our method to a single 20m class Cherenkov telescope with the perspective of its generalization to the diluted Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) under construction in North and South hemispheres.
Recent advances in photonics have revived the interest in intensity interferometry for astronomical applications. The success of amplitude interferometry in the early 1970s, which is now mature and producing spectacular astrophysical results (e.g. GRAVITY, MATISSE, CHARA, etc.), coupled with the limited sensitivity of intensity interferometry stalled any progress on this technique for the past 50 years. However, the precise control of the optical path difference in amplitude interferometry is constraining for very long baselines and at shorter wavelengths. Polarization measurements are also challenging in amplitude interferometry due to instrumental effects. The fortuitous presence of strong groups in astronomical interferometry and quantum optics at Université Côte d’Azur led to the development of a prototype experiment at Calern Observatory, allowing the measure of the temporal correlation g(2)(τ, r=0) in 2016 and of the spatial correlation g(2)(r) in 2017 with a gain in sensitivity (normalized in observing time and collecting area) of a factor ~100 compared to Hanbury Brown and Twiss’s original Narrabri Interferometer. We present possible ways to further develop this technique and point to. possible implementations on existing facilities, such as CTA, the VLTI ATs or the summit of Maunakea, which offer a unique scientific niche.
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