Science cases for a visible interferometer
Philippe Stee, France Allard, Myriam Benisty, Lionel Bigot, Nicolas, Blind, Henri Boffin, Marcelo Borges Fernandes, Alex Carciofi, Andrea, Chiavassa, Orlagh Creevey, Pierre Cruzalebes, Willem-Jan de Wit, Armando, Domiciano de Souza, Martin Elvis, Nicolas Fabas, Daniel Faes

TL;DR
This paper discusses the scientific potential of a future visible interferometer, highlighting current limitations, recent advancements, and diverse astrophysical applications across various stellar and galactic phenomena.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive overview of science cases for a future visible interferometer, based on collaborative discussions and workshops held in 2015.
Findings
Interferometry extends high-resolution capabilities beyond current limits.
Visible interferometry broadens astrophysical research opportunities.
The paper outlines specific science cases across stellar and galactic studies.
Abstract
High spatial resolution is the key for the understanding various astrophysical phenomena. But even with the future E-ELT, single dish instruments are limited to a spatial resolution of about 4 mas in the visible. For the closest objects within our Galaxy most of the stellar photosphere remains smaller than 1 mas. With the success of long baseline interferometry these limitations were soom overcome. Today low and high resolution interferometric instruments on the VLTI and CHARA offer an immense range of astrophysical studies. Combining more telescopes and moving to visible wavelengths broadens the science cases even more. With the idea of developing strong science cases for a future visible interferometer, we organized a science group around the following topics: pre-main sequence and main sequence stars, fundamental parameters, asteroseismology and classical pulsating stars, evolved…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
