Michael R. Pearlman
Harvard University
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1994 Symposium on Astronomical Telescopes & Instrumentation for the 21st Century | 1994
N. P. Carleton; Wesley A. Traub; Marc G. Lacasse; Peter Nisenson; Michael R. Pearlman; Robert D. Reasenberg; Xinqi Xu; Charles M. Coldwell; Alexander Panasyuk; James A. Benson; Costas Papaliolios; Read Predmore; F. Peter Schloerb; H. M. Dyck; David M. Gibson
The first two telescopes of the Infrared-Optical Telescope Array (IOTA) project are now in place and yielding data at the Smithsonian Institutions F. L. Whipple Observatory on Mt. Hopkins, near Tucson, Arizona. The IOTA collectors are 45 cm in diameter, and may be moved to various stations in an L-shaped configuration with a maximum baseline of 38 m. A third collector will be added as soon as funding permits. Each light-collector assembly consists of a siderostat feeding a stationary afocal Cassegrain telescope that produces a 10-X reduced parallel beam, which is in turn directed vertically downward by a piezo-driven active mirror that stabilizes the ultimate image position. The reduced beams enter an evacuated envelope and proceed to the corner of the array, where they are turned back along one arm for path compensation. The delay line, in one beam, consists of two parts: one dihedral reflector positioned in a slew-and-clamp mode to give the major part of the desired delay; and a second dihedral mounted on an air-bearing carriage to provide the variable delay that is needed. After delay, the beams exit from the vacuum and are directed by dichroic mirrors into the infrared beam-combination and detection system. The visible light passes on to another area, to the image-tracker detectors and the visible-light combination and detection system. The beams are combined in pupil-plane mode on beam splitters. The combined IR beams are conveyed to two cooled single-element InSb detectors. The combined visible-light beams are focussed by lenslet arrays onto multimode optical fibers that lead to the slit of a specially-designed prism spectrometer. For the visible mode, the delay line is run at several wavelengths on one side of the zero- path point, so that several cycles of interference occur across the spectrum. First results were obtained with the IR system, giving visibilities for several K and M stars, using 2.2 micrometers radiation on a N-S baseline of 21.2 m. From these measurements we obtained preliminary estimates of effective stellar diameters in the K band.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
F. Peter Schloerb; Jean-Philippe Berger; N. P. Carleton; P. Hagenauer; P. Kern; Pierre Labeye; Marc G. Lacasse; Fabien Malbet; R. Millan-Gabet; John D. Monnier; Michael R. Pearlman; Ettore Pedretti; Karine Rousselet-Perraut; S. Ragland; P. A. Schuller; Wesley A. Traub; Gary Wallace
We present a brief review of recent scientific and technical advances at the Infrared Optical Telescope Array (IOTA). IOTA is a long-baseline interferometer located atop Mount Hopkins, Arizona. Recent work has emphasized the use of the three-telescope interferometer completed in 2002. We report on results obtained on a range of scientific targets, including AGB stars, Herbig AeBe Stars, binary stars, and the recent outburst of the recurrent nova RS Oph. We report the completion of a new spectrometer which allows visibility measurements at several high spectral resolution channels simultaneously. Finally, it is our sad duty to report that IOTA will be closed this year.
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 1998
Alain Bonneville; Michael R. Pearlman
Standardization of reference frames is a fundamental issue for comparison and integration of analysis results by different groups. Participants at the Second International Meeting of the Asia-Pacific Space Geodynamics (APSG) program not only agreed on this point but felt that such standardization could be provided within their own measurement technique panels. APSG has five such panels, covering radio positioning techniques, gravity, synthetic aperture radar (SAR), satellite laser ranging (SLR), and very long baseline interferometry (VLBI). Participants also agreed that they need to establish a reference network, or a network of fixed stations shared among all of the measurement activities, to get position and velocity measurements that can be related from one experiment to another and from one geographic area to another. The lack of such standardization has plagued other programs and made such comparisons very difficult.
Journal of Geodynamics | 2005
Michael R. Pearlman; Carey Noll; Peter Dunn; Julie Horvath; Van S. Husson; Paul Stevens; Mark Torrence; Hoai Vo; Scott Wetzel
Contributions of Space Geodesy to Geodynamics: Technology | 2013
Thomas A. Herring; Michael R. Pearlman
Archive | 2013
Carey Noll; Michael R. Pearlman; Mark H. Torrence
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 1983
Michael R. Pearlman
Archive | 2016
Carey Noll; Michael R. Pearlman
Archive | 2016
Michael R. Pearlman; Erricos C. Pavlis; Chopo Ma; Carey Noll; Daniela Thaller; Bernd Richter; Richard S. Gross; Ruth E. Neilan; Juergen Mueller; Ricardo Barzaghi; Sten Bergstrand; Jerome Saunier; Mark Tamisiea
Archive | 2015
Graham Appleby; Dirk Behrend; Sten Bergstrand; Howard Donovan; Curtis Emerson; Jaime Esper; Hayo Hase; Jim Long; Chopo Ma; David McCormick; Carey Noll; Erricos C. Pavlis; Pascal Ferrage; Michael R. Pearlman; Jerome Saunier; David Stowers; Scott Wetzel