Bibcode
Malbet, F.; Buscher, D.; Weigelt, G.; Garcia, P.; Gai, M.; Lorenzetti, D.; Surdej, J.; Hron, J.; Neuhäuser, R.; Kern, P.; Jocou, L.; Berger, J.-P.; Absil, O.; Beckmann, U.; Corcione, L.; Duvert, G.; Filho, M.; Labeye, P.; Le Coarer, E.; Li Causi, G.; Lima, J.; Perraut, K.; Tatulli, E.; Thiébaut, E.; Young, J.; Zins, G.; Amorim, A.; Aringer, B.; Beckert, T.; Benisty, M.; Bonfils, X.; Cabral, A.; Chelli, A.; Chesneau, O.; Chiavassa, A.; Corradi, R.; De Becker, M.; Delboulbé, A.; Duch"ne, G.; Forveille, T.; Haniff, C.; Herwats, E.; Hofmann, K.-H.; Le Bouquin, J.-B.; Ligori, S.; Loreggia, D.; Marconi, A.; Moitinho, A.; Nisini, B.; Petrucci, P.-O.; Rebordao, J.; Speziali, R.; Testi, L.; Vitali, F.
Bibliographical reference
Optical and Infrared Interferometry. Edited by Schöller, Markus; Danchi, William C.; Delplancke, Françoise. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 7013, pp. 701329-701329-12 (2008).
Advertised on:
7
2008
Citations
0
Refereed citations
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Description
The VLTI Spectro Imager (VSI) was proposed as a second-generation
instrument of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer providing the ESO
community with spectrally-resolved, near-infrared images at angular
resolutions down to 1.1 milliarcsecond and spectral resolutions up to R
= 12000. Targets as faint as K = 13 will be imaged without requiring a
brighter nearby reference object; fainter targets can be accessed if a
suitable reference is available. The unique combination of
high-dynamic-range imaging at high angular resolution and high spectral
resolution enables a scientific program which serves a broad user
community and at the same time provides the opportunity for
breakthroughs in many areas of astrophysics. The high level
specifications of the instrument are derived from a detailed science
case based on the capability to obtain, for the first time,
milliarcsecond-resolution images of a wide range of targets including:
probing the initial conditions for planet formation in the AU-scale
environments of young stars; imaging convective cells and other
phenomena on the surfaces of stars; mapping the chemical and physical
environments of evolved stars, stellar remnants, and stellar winds; and
disentangling the central regions of active galactic nuclei and
supermassive black holes. VSI will provide these new capabilities using
technologies which have been extensively tested in the past and VSI
requires little in terms of new infrastructure on the VLTI. At the same
time, VSI will be able to make maximum use of new infrastructure as it
becomes available; for example, by combining 4, 6 and eventually 8
telescopes, enabling rapid imaging through the measurement of up to 28
visibilities in every wavelength channel within a few minutes. The
current studies are focused on a 4-telescope version with an upgrade to
a 6-telescope one. The instrument contains its own fringe tracker and
tip-tilt control in order to reduce the constraints on the VLTI
infrastructure and maximize the scientific return.