Stellar intensity interferometry over kilometer baselines: Laboratory simulation of observations with the Cherenkov Telescope Array
Dainis Dravins, Tiphaine Lagadec

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates laboratory simulations of stellar intensity interferometry over kilometer-scale baselines using Cherenkov Telescope Array technology, showing potential for high-resolution optical imaging unaffected by atmospheric turbulence.
Contribution
It presents experimental validation of intensity interferometry with kilometer baselines, optimizing methods for future astronomical observations with CTA.
Findings
Successful cross-correlation of intensity fluctuations across multiple baselines.
Verification of the method's insensitivity to atmospheric turbulence.
Potential for order-of-magnitude improvement in optical angular resolution.
Abstract
A long-held astronomical vision is to realize diffraction-limited optical aperture synthesis over kilometer baselines. This will enable imaging of stellar surfaces and their environments, show their evolution over time, and reveal interactions of stellar winds and gas flows in binary star systems. An opportunity is now opening up with the large telescope arrays primarily erected for measuring Cherenkov light in air induced by gamma rays. With suitable software, such telescopes could be electronically connected and used also for intensity interferometry. With no optical connection between the telescopes, the error budget is set by the electronic time resolution of a few nanoseconds. Corresponding light-travel distances are on the order of one meter, making the method practically insensitive to atmospheric turbulence or optical imperfections, permitting both very long baselines and…
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