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The PRIMA fringe sensor unit Context: The fringe sensor unit (FSU) is the central element of thephase referenced imaging and micro-arcsecond astrometry (PRIMA)dual-feed facility and provides fringe sensing for all observationmodes, comprising off-axis fringe tracking, phase referenced imaging,and high-accuracy narrow-angle astrometry. It is installed at the VeryLarge Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) and successfully served thefringe-tracking loop during the initial commissioning phase.Aims: To maximise sensitivity, speed, and robustness, the FSU isdesigned to operate in the infrared K-band and to include spatialfiltering after beam combination and a very-low-resolution spectrometerwithout photometric channels. It consists of two identical fringesensors for dual-star operation in PRIMA astrometric mode. Methods: Unique among interferometric beam combiners, the FSU usesspatial phase modulation in bulk optics to retrieve real-time estimatesof fringe phase after spatial filtering. The beam combination designaccommodates a laser metrology for pathlength monitoring. An R = 20spectrometer across the K-band makes the retrieval of the group delaysignal possible. The calibration procedure uses the artificial lightsource of the VLTI laboratory and is based on Fourier transformspectroscopy to remove instrumental effects. Results: TheFSU was integrated and aligned at the VLTI in July and August 2008. Ityields phase and group delay measurements at sampling rates up to 2 kHz,which are used to drive the fringe-tracking control loop. During thefirst commissioning runs, the FSU was used to track the fringes of starswith K-band magnitudes as faint as mK = 9.0, using two VLTIauxiliary telescopes (AT) and baselines of up to 96 m. Fringe trackingusing two Very Large Telescope (VLT) unit telescopes wasdemonstrated. Conclusions: The concept of spatialphase-modulation for fringe sensing and tracking in stellarinterferometry is demonstrated for the first time with the FSU. Duringinitial commissioning and combining stellar light with two ATs, the FSUshowed its ability to improve the VLTI sensitivity in K-band by morethan one magnitude towards fainter objects, which is fundamental forachieving the scientific objectives of PRIMA.Part of this work is based on technical observations collected at theEuropean Southern Observatory at Paranal, Chile. Public data can bedownloaded athttp://www.eso.org/sci/activities/vltcomm/prima/PACMAN_CommDataRelease_text.html.
| South galactic CAP G and K stars with infrared excesses Near-infrared and IRAS photometry is discussed for 13 G and K stars inthe south galactic cap. Five of them show a strong flux excess at 12microns as would be expected from dust shells emitting at temperaturesof several hundred Kelvin. One of them (XY Tau) has previously beenclassified as a 206-d Mira, but the new observations suggest it isactually a variable F or G star. The most likely explanation is that theoriginal classification was wrong and that it is in fact apremain-sequence star. The other four stars are either in very unusualevolutionary states or they are binary systems. The presence oflong-term variations in the near-infrared flux of the flare star CC Eriis reported. The colors are redder when the star is fainter, and thevariations might be associated with the star spot cycle.
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Observation and Astrometry data
Constellation: | Éridan |
Right ascension: | 02h28m10.77s |
Declination: | -50°18'09.8" |
Apparent magnitude: | 6.973 |
Distance: | 167.224 parsecs |
Proper motion RA: | 66.1 |
Proper motion Dec: | 25.4 |
B-T magnitude: | 8.425 |
V-T magnitude: | 7.093 |
Catalogs and designations:
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