New high-sensitivity, milliarcsecond resolution results from routine observations of lunar occultations at the ESO VLT
A. Richichi, O. Fors, W-P. Chen, E. Mason

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates routine lunar occultation observations at the ESO VLT using millisecond resolution to detect and analyze binary stars and circumstellar features with unprecedented angular resolution in the near-infrared.
Contribution
It introduces a new routine observational program at the VLT utilizing lunar occultations for high-resolution stellar studies, discovering new binaries and circumstellar components.
Findings
Detected 16 new binary stars and 2 triples.
Achieved angular resolution as small as 4 milliarcseconds.
Identified circumstellar shells and resolved stellar sources.
Abstract
(Abridged) Lunar occultations (LO) are a very efficient and powerful technique, that achieves the best combination of high angular resolution and sensitivity possible today at near-infrared wavelengths. Given that the events are fixed in time, that the sources are occulted randomly, and that the telescope use is minimal, the technique is very well suited for service mode observations. We have established a program of routine LO observations at the VLT observatory, especially designed to take advantage of short breaks available in-between other programs. We have used the ISAAC instrument in burst mode, capable of producing continuous read-outs at millisecond rates on a suitable subwindow. Given the random nature of the source selection, our aim has been primarily the investigation of a large number of stellar sources at the highest angular resolution in order to detect new binaries.…
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