Life on the fast lane: the burst mode at the VLT at present and in the future
A. Richichi, O. Fors, E. Mason, M. Delbo, J. Stegmaier, G. Finger

TL;DR
The paper discusses the implementation of high-speed burst mode observations at the VLT, enabling high temporal resolution studies of transient events like lunar occultations, with results surpassing current adaptive optics capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces the use of burst mode at VLT for high-resolution transient observations, demonstrating its effectiveness for lunar occultations and binary detection.
Findings
53 and 71 lunar occultations recorded with 0.5-1 mas resolution
Detection of close binary systems and circumstellar components
Burst mode exceeds adaptive optics in resolution and efficiency
Abstract
The recent implementation of the high-speed burst mode at the ISAAC instrument on UT1, and its propagation to other ESO instruments, has opened the door to observational capabilities which hold the potential for a wealth of novel results. In the ELT era, when the accent will likely be on lengthy programs aimed at the best sensitivity and angular resolution, the VLT telescopes could continue to play a significant and largely unique role by performing routinely observations of transient events at high temporal resolution. In our contribution, we provide details on two such kinds of observations, namely lunar occultations of stars and of asteroids. For the first ones, we report on two passages of the Moon in regions with high stellar density as the Galactic Center. The VLT-UT1 telescope was used for the first time to record successfully 53 and 71 occultations on March 22 and August 6,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Optical Wireless Communication Technologies
