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MIRC-X: a highly-sensitive six telescope interferometric imager at the CHARA Array

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posted on 2025-08-01, 10:20 authored by N Anugu, J-B Le Bouquin, JD Monnier, S Kraus, BR Setterholm, A Labdon, CL Davies, C Lanthermann, T Gardner, J Ennis, KJC Johnson, TT Brummelaar, G Schaefer, J Sturmann
MIRC-X (Michigan InfraRed Combiner-eXeter) is a new highly-sensitive six-telescope interferometric imager installed at the CHARA Array that provides an angular resolution equivalent of up to a 330 m diameter baseline telescope in J and H band wavelengths ( λ 2B ∼ 0.6 milli-arcseconds). We upgraded the original MIRC (Michigan InfraRed Combiner) instrument to improve sensitivity and wavelength coverage in two phases. First, a revolutionary sub-electron noise and fast-frame rate C-RED ONE camera based on a SAPHIRA detector was installed. Second, a new-generation beam combiner was designed and commissioned to (i) maximize sensitivity, (ii) extend the wavelength coverage to J-band, and (iii) enable polarization observations. A low-latency and fast-frame rate control software enables high-efficiency observations and fringe tracking for the forthcoming instruments at CHARA Array. Since mid-2017, MIRC-X has been offered to the community and has demonstrated best-case H-band sensitivity down to 8.2 correlated magnitude. MIRC-X uses single-mode fibers to coherently combine light of six telescopes simultaneously with an image-plane combination scheme and delivers a visibility precision better than 1%, and closure phase precision better than 1◦ . MIRC-X aims at (i) imaging protoplanetary disks, (ii) detecting exoplanets with precise astrometry, and (iii) imaging stellar surfaces and star-spots at an unprecedented angular resolution in the near-infrared. In this paper, we present the instrument design, installation, operation, and on-sky results, and demonstrate the imaging capability of MIRC-X on the binary system ι Peg. The purpose of this paper is to provide a solid reference for studies based on MIRC-X data and to inspire future instruments in optical interferometry

Funding

29239380

630008203

80NSSC19K1530

NASA

NNX15AJ20H

NNX16AD43G

NSF-ATI 1506540

National Science Foundation (NSF)

ST/S005293/1

Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC)

History

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Rights

© 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from IOP Publishing via the DOI in this record

Journal

Astronomical Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing for American Astronomical Society

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2020-08-18T08:58:14Z

FOA date

2021-09-09T23:00:00Z

Citation

Vol. 160 (4), article 158

Department

  • Physics and Astronomy