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Bambery, R. & Backus, C. 2001, in ASP Conf. Ser., Vol. 238, Astronomical Data Analysis Software and Systems X, eds. F. R. Harnden, Jr., F. A. Primini, & H. E. Payne (San Francisco: ASP), 369
Prototypical Operations Support Tools for NASA Interferometer Missions: Applications to Studies of Binary Stars Using the Palomar Testbed Interferometer
Raymond J. Bambery and Charles Backus
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Caltech, Pasadena CA 91109
Abstract:
The Palomar Testbed Interferometer
(PTI) is a 110-meter baseline K-Band infrared interferometer located at
Palomar Mountain, California. In 1999 an effort was started to provide
more observer-friendly observation planning and monitoring tools, such as
might be used in NASA interferometer missions. This session illustrates
how these prototype tools aid in the observation of spectroscopic
binary stars. Animations, using IDL, show how the measured visibilities
relate to the positions of the secondary star during its orbital period.
The Palomar Testbed Interferometer (PTI) is a two-element infrared
interferometer located at Palomar Mountain, San Diego County,
California (Colavita 1999). Although it has 3 telescopes, only two
of them (1-baseline) can be used at one time. PTI was developed as a
proof-of-concept for three NASA optical and infrared interferometers: the
Keck Interferometer (a ground-based visible and infrared interferometer),
the StarLight Mission (a space-based formation-flying visible wavelength
interferometer) and the Space Interferometry Mission (a space-based
visible astrometric interferometer). In spite of its testbed origins, PTI
is a fully-functional astronomical interferometer capable of performing
scientific investigations. From 1997-98 an off-line suite of routines
performed analyses on spectroscopic binaries, stellar diameters and
atmospheric modeling. In 1999 an effort was undertaken to prototype
mission operations support tools at PTI. This session illustrates how
these prototype tools aid in the observation of spectroscopic binary
stars.
PTI has a fringe spacing of 5.0milliarcseconds (mas) in the
K-Band infrared (2.0-2.4 microns) for its 110-meter North-South baseline.
By comparison, the Hubble Space Telescope WFPC-2 camera has a pixel size
of 46mas and a point spread function at Full-Width Half-Maximum
of 50mas (Figure 1).
Figure:
PTI resolution compared to HST.
|
In its simplest operating mode PTI yields unphased visibility (actually
visibility squared), which is the fringe contrast of an observed brightness
distribution on the sky normalized to [0:1]. As described by Boden (1999)
the Visibility modulus, V, for a single star in a uniform disk model is:
|
(1) |
where is the first order Bessel function,
B is the Projected baseline vector magnitude at the star position, in meters,
is the apparent angular diameter of star, in radians, and
is the center-band wavelength, in meters.
Visibility is related to the angular size of the star. When the size is
point-like relative to the fringe spacing then the visibility approaches
unity, but as the size approaches the fringe spacing (5.0mas)
the visibility approaches zero.
Double star visibility squared in a narrow pass-band is:
|
(2) |
where and are visibility moduli for each component,
r is the brightness ratio between primary and secondary,
B is the projected baseline vector at the star position, and
s is the primary-secondary angular separation vector on plane of sky.
Since the angular separation of the two stars in the spectroscopic
binary is greater than the fringe spacing, visibility goes to a maximum
when the centers of the two stars lie on fringe maxima (multiples of
the fringe spacing). Visibility goes to a minimum when the center of the
secondary star lies on a fringe minimum. (The center of the primary star
is always on a fringe maximum.)
Delay line jitter, the measured movement of the delay position of
the central fringe (measured in nanometers) over the duration of the
integration time, is converted to phase error in radians. Jitter provides
a measure of both the instrument and atmospheric stability for each
observation and yields the formal errors in the visibility calculation.
Observations on each target are accompanied by measurement of calibrator
targets, whose angular sizes are computed from astrophysical models.
Visibilities from the calibrators are used to determine the system
(instrumental and atmospheric) response for a nightly run.
During 1999 -Andromedae, a B8 IVmnp spectroscopic binary,
was observed on 7 nights over 75 days of -Andromedae's 96.7-day
period. Using the visibilities and baseline orientation from observations
at PTI, combined with the radial velocity semi-amplitudes, K1 and K2
from Ryabchicova (1999), allowed monitoring of the orbital motion of
the secondary star.
For the years 1997-98, PTI science observers used software developed
by the instrument engineers to monitor their nightly runs. However,
this software only manages the current target observation and has no
ability to recall earlier observations. The night observer would run an
off-line batch process to display the earlier observations to note trends
in the instrument performance or seeing conditions. In 1999, an effort
was started to provide more observer-friendly observation planning and
monitoring tools. For example, a science analysis routine was modified
to provide a real time monitoring tool, rtvis. The output of
rtvis is read by a Java tool that continually monitors instrument output
as the data is collected.
Figure:
PTI Night 261: (a) visibility vs. time, (b) jitter vs. time.
|
Figures 2a and 2b show two of the diagnostics that summarize the
results of an observation. Figure 2a shows a typical night (Night
261 in 1999) for the variation of visibility of -Andromedae
over 2 hours. Figure 2b shows the corresponding jitter value
for the same period. Note that PTI is queue-scheduled for a number of
different observers and the figures show these other observations.
The values for -Andromedae (HDC358) and its calibrators HDC1404
and HDC166 are circled in both figures. Note the variation of visibility
as the secondary star passes through a fringe maximum and minimum.
An IDL animation was created from this data, radial velocity data and
orbital parameters. Figure 3 is one frame from that animation and shows
the orbit of the secondary around the primary. The width of the arrows
extending downward from each star through the fringe pattern indicates
the relative contribution of each star to the total visibility. The two
lower panels show the visibility values on the left and the baseline
orientation on the right. During the animation the values for each
observation are highlighted on these panels.
Acknowledgments
The research described in this article was carried out by the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, California, California Institute of Technology,
under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
A special thanks to Dr. Andrew F. Boden of Caltech's Interferometry
Science Center for numerous and valuable discussions, comments, and
clarifications of interferometric observations of binary stars at PTI.
Figure:
PTI Observations vs. Orbit of -Andromedae.
|
References
Boden, A., et al. 1999, ApJ, 515, 356
Colavita, M., et al. 1999, ApJ, 510, 505
Ryabchicova, T., Malanuschenko, V., & Adelman, S. 1999,
A&A, 351, 963
© Copyright 2001 Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 390 Ashton Avenue, San Francisco, California 94112, USA
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