Maximizing the community exploitation of the VLTI 2nd-generation instruments
Kraus, S; Garcia, P; Perrin, G
Date: 3 April 2018
Journal
Experimental Astronomy
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI, Figure 1) is the European flagship
interferometric facility and allows European astronomers to study the universe on milliarcsecond
scale, enabling fundamentally new opportunities in planet formation to stellar and
extragalactic astronomy. The facility was conceived with the goal of ...
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI, Figure 1) is the European flagship
interferometric facility and allows European astronomers to study the universe on milliarcsecond
scale, enabling fundamentally new opportunities in planet formation to stellar and
extragalactic astronomy. The facility was conceived with the goal of making optical
interferometry available to the whole European astronomy community and to serve the needs
both of expert as well as non-expert users. The VINCI commissioning instrument (Kervella et
al. 2000), the 1st generation
instruments MIDI (Leinert et al. 2003) and AMBER (Petrov et al.
2007) and the visitor instrument PIONIER (LeBouquin et al. 2011) took major steps towards
this goal but revealed also challenges, for instance, related to attracting non-expert users to
interferometry. Currently, the VLTI undergoes a major transformation with the arrival of the
2nd-generation instruments GRAVITY (GRAVITY collaboration et al. 2017) and MATISSE (Matter
et al. 2016). GRAVITY has been offered to the community since October 2016, while the onsky
commissioning of MATISSE is due to start in early 2018, with a possible start of regular
science observations the following year. In this contribution, we reflect on how the 2ndgeneration
instruments might help in expanding the VLTI user community and we will discuss
steps that could be taken to support this process. The expert community, both inside and
outside of the instrument consortia, should coordinate in order to optimize the scientific
output of the new VLTI instruments.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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