Betelgeuse scope: Single-mode-fibers-assisted optical interferometer design for dedicated stellar activity monitoring
Anugu, N; Morzinski, KM; Eisner, J; et al.Douglas, E; Marrone, D; Ertel, S; Haffert, S; Montoya, O; Stone, J; Kraus, S; Monnier, J; Lebouquin, JB; Berger, JP; Woillez, J; Montargès, M
Date: 21 August 2020
Journal
Proceedings of SPIE
Publisher
Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Betelgeuse has experienced a sudden shift in its brightness and dimmed mysteriously. This is likely caused by a hot blob of plasma ejected from Betelgeuse and then cooled to obscuring dust. If true, it is a remarkable opportunity to directly witness the formation of dust around a red supergiant star. Today's optical telescope facilities ...
Betelgeuse has experienced a sudden shift in its brightness and dimmed mysteriously. This is likely caused by a hot blob of plasma ejected from Betelgeuse and then cooled to obscuring dust. If true, it is a remarkable opportunity to directly witness the formation of dust around a red supergiant star. Today's optical telescope facilities are not optimized for monitoring the Betelgeuse surface, so in this work, we propose a low-cost optical interferometer. The facility will consist of 12 x 4 inch optical telescopes mounted to the surface of a large radio dish for model-independent aperture synthesis imaging; polarization-maintaining single-mode fibers will carry the coherent beams from the individual optical telescopes to an all-in-one beam combiner. A fast steering mirror assisted fiber injection system guides the flux into fibers. A metrology system senses vibration-induced piston errors in optical fibers, and these errors are corrected using fast-steering delay lines. We will present the design.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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