Stellar Intensity Interferometry: Prospects for sub-milliarcsecond optical imaging
Dainis Dravins (Lund Observatory), Stephan LeBohec (University of, Utah), Hannes Jensen (Lund Observatory, Stockholm University), Paul D., Nu\~nez (University of Utah)

TL;DR
Using large arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, intensity interferometry can achieve sub-milliarcsecond optical imaging, enabling detailed studies of stellar surfaces and circumstellar structures with high resolution and atmospheric insensitivity.
Contribution
This paper reviews the potential of intensity interferometry with Cherenkov telescope arrays for high-resolution optical imaging and discusses the feasibility of future observational programs.
Findings
Simulated observations reach ~30 microarcsec resolution.
Intensity interferometry is insensitive to atmospheric turbulence.
Experiments and trials with Cherenkov telescopes are underway.
Abstract
Using kilometric arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, intensity interferometry may increase the spatial resolution in optical astronomy by an order of magnitude, enabling images of rapidly rotating stars with structures in their circumstellar disks and winds, or mapping out patterns of nonradial pulsations across stellar surfaces. Intensity interferometry (pioneered by Hanbury Brown and Twiss) connects telescopes only electronically, and is practically insensitive to atmospheric turbulence and optical imperfections, permitting observations over long baselines and through large airmasses, also at short optical wavelengths. The required large telescopes with very fast detectors are becoming available as arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, distributed over a few square km. Digital signal handling enables very many baselines to be synthesized, while stars are tracked with electronic time…
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