Long-baseline optical intensity interferometry: Laboratory demonstration of diffraction-limited imaging
Dainis Dravins, Tiphaine Lagadec, Paul D. Nu\~nez

TL;DR
This study demonstrates laboratory diffraction-limited imaging using optical intensity interferometry with an array of telescopes connected solely by electronic software, confirming the method's potential for high-resolution astronomical imaging over long baselines.
Contribution
First experimental verification of diffraction-limited optical imaging using electronically linked telescope arrays without optical connections.
Findings
Achieved high-resolution coherence maps across 180 baselines.
Successfully reconstructed two-dimensional images of artificial stars.
Validated the feasibility of long-baseline optical intensity interferometry for astronomical imaging.
Abstract
A long-held vision has been to realize diffraction-limited optical aperture synthesis over kilometer baselines. This will enable imaging of stellar surfaces and their environments, and reveal interacting gas flows in binary 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 also used for intensity interferometry. Second-order spatial coherence of light is obtained by cross correlating intensity fluctuations measured in different pairs of telescopes. With no optical links between them, the error budget is set by the electronic time resolution of a few nanoseconds. Corresponding light-travel distances are approximately one meter, making the method practically immune to atmospheric turbulence or optical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Optical Polarization and Ellipsometry · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
