Luigi Andolfato
European Southern Observatory
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Featured researches published by Luigi Andolfato.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Andreas Glindemann; Maja Albertsen; Luigi Andolfato; Gerardo Avila; Pascal Ballester; Bertrand Bauvir; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Martin Dimmler; Philippe Duhoux; Emmanuel di Folco; R. Frahm; Emmanuel Galliano; Bruno Gilli; Paul Giordano; Philippe B. Gitton; Stephane Guisard; Nico Housen; Christian A. Hummel; Alexis Huxley; Robert Karban; Pierre Kervella; M. Kiekebusch; Bertrand Koehler; Samuel A. Leveque; Tom Licha; Antonio Longinotti; Derek J. McKay; Serge Menardi; Guy J. Monnet
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) on Cerro Paranal (2635 m) in Northern Chile reached a major milestone in September 2003 when the mid infrared instrument MIDI was offered for scientific observations to the community. This was only nine months after MIDI had recorded first fringes. In the meantime, the near infrared instrument AMBER saw first fringes in March 2004, and it is planned to offer AMBER in September 2004. The large number of subsystems that have been installed in the last two years - amongst them adaptive optics for the 8-m Unit Telescopes (UT), the first 1.8-m Auxiliary Telescope (AT), the fringe tracker FINITO and three more Delay Lines for a total of six, only to name the major ones - will be described in this article. We will also discuss the next steps of the VLTI mainly concerned with the dual feed system PRIMA and we will give an outlook to possible future extensions.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Samuel A. Leveque; Serge Menardi; Roberto Abuter; Luigi Andolfato; Pascal Ballester; Jeroen de Jong; Nicola Di Lieto; Philippe Duhoux; R. Frahm; Philippe B. Gitton; Andreas Glindemann; Ralf Palsa; Florence Puech; Johannes Sahlmann; Nicolas Schuhler; Thanh Phan Duc; Bruno Valat; Anders Wallander
PRIMA, the Phase-Referenced Imaging and Micro-arcsecond Astrometry facility for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer, is now nearing the end of its manufacturing phase. An intensive test period of the various sub-systems (star separators, fringe sensor units and incremental metrology) and of their interactions in the global system will start in Garching as soon as they are delivered. The status and performances of the individual sub-systems are presented in this paper as well as the proposed observation and calibration strategy to reach the challenging goal of high-accuracy differential astrometry at 10 μas level.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Francoise Delplancke; J.R. Nijenhuis; Harry de Man; Luigi Andolfato; Rainer Treichel; Jan Hopman; Frederic Derie
In the framework of the Phase-Referenced Imaging and Micro-arcsecond Astrometry facility (PRIMA) developed for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), a sophisticated opto-mechanical system has been developed by TNO-TPD. It will be placed at the Coudé focus of the telescopes and will allow picking up two stars anywhere in a 2 arcmin field-of-view and collimating their light into two beams that will propagate through the rest of the interferometer toward the instrument. These Star Separator systems have a very high optical quality, fast and accurate pointing and chopping, independent high speed remote control of the beam tip-tilt and of the pupil position. They are very rigid, accurate mechanical systems non-sensitive to temperature variations The Star Separator systems are described in this paper.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Pierre Haguenauer; Jaime Alonso; Pierre Bourget; S. Brillant; Philippe B. Gitton; Stephane Guisard; Sébastien Poupar; Nicolas Schuhler; Roberto Abuter; Luigi Andolfato; Guillaume Blanchard; Jean-Philippe Berger; Angela Cortes; Frederic Derie; Francoise Delplancke; Nicola Di Lieto; Christophe Dupuy; Bruno Gilli; Andreas Glindemann; Serge Guniat; Gerhard Huedepohl; Andreas Kaufer; Jean-Baptiste Le Bouquin; Samuel A. Leveque; Serge Menardi; A. Mérand; S. Morel; Isabelle Percheron; Than Phan Duc; Andres Pino
The ESO Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) offers access to the four 8-m Unit Telescopes (UT) and the four 1.8-m Auxiliary Telescopes (AT) of the Paranal Observatory located in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. The two VLTI instruments, MIDI and AMBER deliver regular scientific results. In parallel to the operation, the instruments developments are pursued, and new modes are studied and commissioned to offer a wider range of scientific possibilities to the community. New configurations of the ATs array are discussed with the science users of the VLTI and implemented to optimize the scientific return. The monitoring and improvement of the different systems of the VLTI is a continuous work. The PRIMA instrument, bringing astrometry capability to the VLTI and phase referencing to the instruments has been successfully installed and the commissioning is ongoing. The possibility for visiting instruments has been opened to the VLTI facility.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2008
R. Launhardt; D. Queloz; Th. Henning; A. Quirrenbach; Francoise Delplancke; Luigi Andolfato; Harald Baumeister; Peter Bizenberger; H. Bleuler; Bruno Chazelas; Frederic Derie; L. Di Lieto; Thanh Phan Duc; O. Duvanel; N. M. Elias; M. Fluery; R. Geisler; D. Gillet; U. Graser; Franz Koch; R. Köhler; Charles Maire; Denis Mégevand; Y. Michellod; J.-M. Moresmau; A. Müller; P. Müllhaupt; Vianak Naranjo; F. Pepe; Sabine Reffert
PRIMA, the instrument for Phase-Referenced Imaging and Micro-arcsecond Astrometry at the VLTI, is currently being developed at ESO. PRIMA will implement the dual-feed capability, at first for two UTs or ATs, to enable simultaneous interferometric observations of two objects that are separated by up to 1 arcmin. PRIMA is designed to perform narrow-angle astrometry in K-band with two ATs as well as phase-referenced aperture synthesis imaging with instruments like Amber and Midi. In order to speed up the full implementation of the 10 microarcsec astrometric capability of the VLTI and to carry out a large astrometric planet search program, a consortium lead by the Observatoire de Genève, Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, and Landessternwarte Heidelberg, has built Differential Delay Lines for PRIMA and is developing the astrometric observation preparation and data reduction software. When the facility becomes fully operational in 2009, we will use PRIMA to carry out a systematic astrometric Exoplanet Search program, called ESPRI. In this paper, we describe the narrow-angle astrometry measurement principle, give an overview of the ongoing hardand software developments, and outline our anticipated astrometric exoplanet search program.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
J. Sahlmann; T. Henning; D. Queloz; A. Quirrenbach; Nicholas M. Elias; R. Launhardt; F. Pepe; Sabine Reffert; D. Ségransan; J. Setiawan; Roberto Abuter; Luigi Andolfato; Peter Bizenberger; Harald Baumeister; Bruno Chazelas; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; N. Di Lieto; Thanh Phan Duc; Michel Fleury; U. Graser; A. Kaminski; R. Köhler; Samuel A. Leveque; Charles Maire; Denis Mégevand; A. Mérand; Yvan Michellod; J.-M. Moresmau; M. Mohler
Context. The ESPRI project relies on the astrometric capabilities offered by the PRIMA facility of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer for discovering and studying planetary systems. Our survey consists of obtaining high-precision astrometry for a large sample of stars over several years to detect their barycentric motions due to orbiting planets. We present the operations principle, the instruments implementation, and the results of a first series of test observations. Aims. We give a comprehensive overview of the instrument infrastructure and present the observation strategy for dual-field relative astrometry in the infrared K-band. We describe the differential delay lines, a key component of the PRIMA facility that was delivered by the ESPRI consortium, and discuss their performance within the facility. This paper serves as reference for future ESPRI publications and for the users of the PRIMA facility. Methods. Observations of bright visual binaries were used to test the observation procedures and to establish the instruments astrometric precision and accuracy. The data reduction strategy for the astrometry and the necessary corrections to the raw data are presented. Adaptive optics observations with NACO were used as an independent verification of PRIMA astrometric observations. Results. The PRIMA facility was used to carry out tests of astrometric observations. The astrometric performance in terms of precision is limited by the atmospheric turbulence at a level close to the theoretical expectations and a precision of 30 mu as was achieved. In contrast, the astrometric accuracy is insufficient for the goals of the ESPRI project and is currently limited by systematic errors that originate in the part of the interferometer beamtrain that is not monitored by the internal metrology system. Conclusions. Our observations led to defining corrective actions required to make the facility ready for carrying out the ESPRI search for extrasolar planets.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
A. Mérand; Roberto Abuter; Emmanuel Aller-Carpentier; Luigi Andolfato; Jaime Alonso; Jean-Philippe Berger; Guillaume Blanchard; Henri M. J. Boffin; Pierre Bourget; Paul Bristow; Claudia Cid; Willem-Jan de Wit; Diego Del Valle; F. Delplancke-Ströbele; Frederic Derie; Lorena Faundez; Steve Ertel; Rebekka Grellmann; Philippe B. Gitton; Andreas Glindemann; Patricia Guajardo; S. Guieu; Stephane Guisard; Serge Guniat; Pierre Haguenauer; Cristian Herrera; Christian A. Hummel; Carlos La Fuente; Marcelo Lopez; Pedro Mardones
We present the latest update of the European Southern Observatorys Very Large Telescope interferometer (VLTI). The operations of VLTI have greatly improved in the past years: reduction of the execution time; better offering of telescopes configurations; improvements on AMBER limiting magnitudes; study of polarization effects and control for single mode fibres; fringe tracking real time data, etc. We present some of these improvements and also quantify the operational improvements using a performance metric. We take the opportunity of the first decade of operations to reflect on the VLTI community which is analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively. Finally, we present briefly the preparatory work for the arrival of the second generation instruments GRAVITY and MATISSE.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Julien Woillez; Roberto Abuter; Luigi Andolfato; Jean-Philippe Berger; Henri Bonnet; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; N. Di Lieto; Serge Guniat; A. Mérand; T. Phan Duc; C. Schmid; Nicolas Schuhler; T. Henning; R. Launhardt; F. Pepe; D. Queloz; A. Quirrenbach; Sabine Reffert; J. Sahlmann; D. Segransan
In the summer of 2011, the first on-sky astrometric commissioning of PRIMA-Astrometry delivered a performance of 3 m″ for a 10 ″ separation on bright objects, orders of magnitude away from its exoplanet requirement of 50 μ″ ~ 20 μ″ on objects as faint as 11 mag ~ 13 mag in K band. This contribution focuses on upgrades and characterizations carried out since then. The astrometric metrology was extended from the Coudé focus of the Auxillary Telescopes to their secondary mirror, in order to reduce the baseline instabilities and improve the astrometric performance. While carrying out this extension, it was realized that the polarization retardance of the star separator derotator had a major impact on both the astrometric metrology and the fringe sensors. A local compensation of this retardance and the operation on a symmetric baseline allowed a new astrometric commissioning. In October 2013, an improved astrometric performance of 160 μ″ was demonstrated, still short of the requirements. Instabilities in the astrometric baseline still appear to be the dominating factor. In preparation to a review held in January 2014, a plan was developed to further improve the astrometric and faint target performance of PRIMA Astrometry. On the astrometric aspect, it involved the extension of the internal longitudinal metrology to primary space, the design and implementation of an external baseline metrology, and the development of an astrometric internal fringes mode. On the faint target aspect, investigations of the performance of the fringe sensor units and the development of an AO system (NAOMI) were in the plan. Following this review, ESO decided to take a proposal to the April 2014 STC that PRIMA be cancelled, and that ESO resources be concentrated on ensuring that Gravity and Matisse are a success. This proposal was recommended by the STC in May 2014, and endorsed by ESO.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Pierre Haguenauer; Roberto Abuter; Luigi Andolfato; Jaime Alonso; Guillaume Blanchard; Jean-Philippe Berger; Pierre Bourget; S. Brillant; Frederic Derie; Francoise Delplancke; Nicola Di Lieto; Christophe Dupuy; Bruno Gilli; Philippe B. Gitton; J. C. González; Stephane Guisard; Serge Guniat; Gerhard Hudepohl; Andreas Kaufer; Samuel A. Leveque; Serge Menardi; A. Mérand; S. Morel; Isabelle Percheron; Than Phan Duc; Sébastien Poupar; Andres Ramirez; Claudio Reineiro; Sridharan Rengaswamy; Thomas Rivinius
The ESO Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) offers access to the four 8-m Unit Telescopes (UT) and the four 1.8-m Auxiliary Telescopes (AT) of the Paranal Observatory located in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. The two VLTI instruments, MIDI and AMBER deliver regular scientific results. In parallel to the operation, the instruments developments are pursued, and new modes are studied and commissioned to offer a wider range of scientific possibilities to the community and increase sensitivity. New configurations of the ATs have been offered and are frequently discussed with the science users of the VLTI and implemented to optimize the scientific return. The PRIMA instrument, bringing astrometry capability to the VLTI and phase referencing to the instruments is being commissioned. The visitor instrument PIONIER is now fully operational and bringing imaging capability to the VLTI. The current status of the VLTI is described with successes and scientific results, and prospects on future evolution are presented.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Emmanuel Aller-Carpentier; Reinhold J. Dorn; Françoise Delplancke-Stroebele; Jerome Paufique; Luigi Andolfato; Christophe Dupuy; Enrico Fedrigo; Philippe B. Gitton; Paul Jolley; Paul Lilley; Miska Le Louarn; Than Phan Duc; Andrew Rakich; Javier Reyes; Robert Ridings; Julien Woillez; Enrico Marchetti; Marcos Suárez Valles; C. Schmid; Norbert Hubin; Jean-Philippe Berger; J. Quentin; Bernard-Alexis Delabre; Stewart McLay; Luca Pasquini
The New Adaptive Optics Module for Interferometry (NAOMI)1 is the future low order adaptive optics system to be developed for and installed at the ESO 1.8 m Auxiliary Telescopes (ATs). The four ATs2 are designed for interferometry which they are essentially dedicated for. Currently the AT’s are equipped with a fast, visible tip-tilt sensor called STRAP3 (System for Tip/tilt Removal with Avalanche Photodiodes), and the corrections are applied through a tip-tilt mirror. The goal is to equip all four ATs with a low-order Shack-Hartmann system operating in the visible for the VLTI dual feed light beams in place of the current tip-tilt correction. Because of the limited size of the ATs (1.8m diameter), a low-order system will be sufficient. The goal is to concentrate the energy into a coherent core and to make the encircled energy (into the single mode fibers) stable and less dependent on the atmospheric conditions in order to increase the sensitivity of the interferometric instruments. The system will use the ESO real time computer platform Sparta-light as the baseline. This paper presents the preliminary design concept and outlines the benefits to current and future VLTI instruments.