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Dive into the research topics where Serge Menardi is active.

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Featured researches published by Serge Menardi.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

The VLT Interferometer: a unique instrument for high-resolution astronomy

Andreas Glindemann; Roberto Abuter; Franco Carbognani; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Alberto Gennai; Philippe B. Gitton; Pierre Kervella; Bertrand Koehler; Samuel A. Leveque; Serge Menardi; Alain Michel; Francesco Paresce; Than Phan Duc; A. Richichi; Markus Schoeller; M. Tarenghi; Anders Wallander; Rainer Wilhelm

The Very Large Telescope (VLT) Observatory on Cerro Paranal (2635 m) in Northern Chile is approaching completion in this year when the fourth of the 8-m Unit Telescopes will see first light. At the same time, the preparation for first fringes of the VLT Interferometer (VLTI) is advancing rapidly with the goal of having the first fringes with two siderostats within this year. In this article we describe the status of the VLTI and its subsystems, we discuss the planning for first fringes with the different telescopes and instruments. Eventually, we present an outlook for the future of interferometry with Very Large Telescopes.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

The PRIMA fringe sensor unit

Johannes Sahlmann; Serge Menardi; Roberto Abuter; Matteo Accardo; Sergio Mottini; Francoise Delplancke

Context. The fringe sensor unit (FSU) is the central element of the phase referenced imaging and micro-arcsecond astrometry (PRIMA) dual-feed facility and provides fringe sensing for all observation modes, comprising off-axis fringe tracking, phase referenced imaging, and high-accuracy narrow-angle astrometry. It is installed at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) and successfully served the fringe-tracking loop during the initial commissioning phase. Aims. To maximise sensitivity, speed, and robustness, the FSU is designed to operate in the infrared K-band and to include spatial filtering after beam combination and a very-low-resolution spectrometer without photometric channels. It consists of two identical fringe sensors for dual-star operation in PRIMA astrometric mode. Methods. Unique among interferometric beam combiners, the FSU uses spatial phase modulation in bulk optics to retrieve real-time estimates of fringe phase after spatial filtering. The beam combination design accommodates a laser metrology for pathlength monitoring. An R = 20 spectrometer across the K-band makes the retrieval of the group delay signal possible. The calibration procedure uses the artificial light source of the VLTI laboratory and is based on Fourier transform spectroscopy to remove instrumental effects. Results. The FSU was integrated and aligned at the VLTI in July and August 2008. It yields phase and group delay measurements at sampling rates up to 2 kHz, which are used to drive the fringe-tracking control loop. During the first commissioning runs, the FSU was used to track the fringes of stars with K-band magnitudes as faint as mK = 9.0, using two VLTI auxiliary telescopes (AT) and baselines of up to 96 m. Fringe tracking using two Very Large Telescope (VLT) unit telescopes was demonstrated. Conclusions. The concept of spatial phase-modulation for fringe sensing and tracking in stellar interferometry is demonstrated for the first time with the FSU. During initial commissioning and combining stellar light with two ATs, the FSU showed its ability to improve the VLTI sensitivity in K-band by more than one magnitude towards fainter objects, which is fundamental for achieving the scientific objectives of PRIMA.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

The VLTI – A Status Report

Andreas Glindemann; J. Algomedo; R. Amestica; Pascal Ballester; Bertrand Bauvir; E. Bugueño; Serge Correia; F. Delgado; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Ph. Duhoux; E. Di Folco; Alberto Gennai; Bruno Gilli; Paul Giordano; Ph. Gitton; Stephane Guisard; Nico Housen; Alexis Huxley; Pierre Kervella; M. Kiekebusch; Bertrand Koehler; Samuel A. Leveque; Antonio Longinotti; Serge Menardi; S. Morel; Francesco Paresce; T. Phan Duc; A. Richichi; M. Schöller

The Very Large Telescope (VLT) Observatory on Cerro Paranal (2635 m) in Northern Chile is approaching completion. After the four 8-m Unit Telescopes (UT) individually saw first light in the last years, two of them were combined for the first time on October 30, 2001 to form a stellar interferometer, the VLT Interferometer. The remaining two UTs will be integrated into the interferometric array later this year. In this article, we will describe the subsystems of the VLTI and the planning for the following years.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

The VLTI fringe sensors: FINITO and PRIMA FSU

M. Gai; Serge Menardi; Stefano Cesare; Bertrand Bauvir; Donata Bonino; Leonardo Corcione; Martin Dimmler; Giuseppe Massone; François Reynaud; Anders Wallander

FINITO is the first generation VLTI fringe sensor, optimised for three beam observations, recently installed at Paranal and currently used for VLTI optimisation. The PRIMA FSU is the second generation, optimised for astrometry in dual-feed mode, currently in construction. We discuss the constraints of fringe tracking at VLTI, the basic functions required for stabilised interferometric observations, and their different implementation in the two instruments, with remarks on the most critical technical aspects. We provide an estimate of the expected performance and describe some of their possible observing and calibration modes, with reference to the current scientific combiners.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

VLTI technical advances: present and future

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

PRIMA for the VLTI: a status report

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.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

First sky validation of an optical polarimetric interferometer

Karine Rousselet-Perraut; J.-B. Le Bouquin; D. Mourard; F. Vakili; O. Chesneau; D. Bonneau; J. L. Chevassut; A. Crocherie; A. Glentzlin; S. Jankov; Serge Menardi; Romain G. Petrov; C. Stehlé

Aims.We present the first lab and sky validation of spectro-polarimetric equipment put at the combined focus of an optical long-baseline interferometer. We tested the polarimetric mode designed for the visible GI2T Interferometer to offer spectropolarimetric diagnosis at the milliarcsecond scale. Methods.We first checked the whole instrumental polarization in the lab with a fringe simulator, and then we observed α Cep and α Lyr as stellar calibrators of different declinations to tabulate the polarization effects throughout the GI2T declination range. Results.The difference between both linear polarizations is within the error bars and the visibilities recorded in natural light (i.e. without the polarimeter) for calibration purposes are the same order of magnitude as the polarized ones. We followed the α Cep visibility for 2 h after the transit and α Lyr for 1.5 h and detected no decrease with hour angle due to the fringe pattern smearing by instrumental polarization. Conclusions.Differential celestial rotation due to the dissymetric Coude trains of the GI2T is well-compensated by the field rotators, so the instrumental polarization is controlled over a relatively wide hour angle range (±2 h around the transit at least). Such a polarimetric mode opens new opportunities especially for studies of circumstellar environments and significantly enhances both the potential of an optical array and its ability for accurate calibration.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Fringe tracking at VLTI : status report

Jean-Baptiste Le Bouquin; Roberto Abuter; Bertrand Bauvir; Henri Bonnet; Pierre Haguenauer; Nicola Di Lieto; Serge Menardi; S. Morel; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; Markus Schoeller; Anders Wallander; Stefan Wehner

FINITO (the VLTI three beam fringe-tracker) has been offered in September 2007 to the astronomical community for observations with the scientific instruments AMBER and MIDI. In this paper, we describe the last improvements of the fringe-tracking loop and its actual performance when operating with the 1.8m Auxiliary Telescopes. We demonstrate the gain provided to the scientific observations. Finally, we discuss how FINITO real-time data could be used in post-processing to enhance the scientific return of the facility.


Astrophysics and Space Science | 2003

PRIMA for the VLTI — Science

Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Francesco Paresce; Andreas Glindemann; F. Lévy; Samuel A. Leveque; Serge Menardi

The four main scientific objectives of PRIMA – the Phase-Referenced Imaging and Micro-arc second Astrometry facility for the VLTI – will be described:– extra-solar system characterization with astrometry, to detect planets and evaluate their mass, and imaging of the dust accretion disk,– galactic center study with astrometry(dynamics of the bulge stars) and imaging at 10μm (piercing the gas and dust clouds surrounding the galactic center),– observations of AGNs and other extra-galactic objects, too faint to be observed without PRIMA, for which partial imaging is needed to constrain their structuremodels,– micro-gravitational lensing event resolution (imaging and astrometry of their photo-center) in the Galactic Bulge and Magellanic Clouds, helping to determine directly the lens mass and distance.


Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Iv Physique Astrophysique | 2001

The VLT Interferometer

Andreas Glindemann; Roberto Abuter; Franco Carbognani; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Alberto Gennai; Philippe B. Gitton; Pierre Kervella; Bertrand Koehler; Samuel A. Leveque; Serge Menardi; Alain Michel; Francesco Paresce; Than Phan Duc; A. Richichi; M. Schöller; M. Tarenghi; Anders Wallander; Rainer Wilhelm

One of the observing modes available with the ESO Very Large Telescope will be coherent combination of the light received by up to four 8m unit telescopes and several 1.8m auxiliary telescopes. The location of the main telescopes is fixed, while auxiliary telescopes can be moved among some 30 observing stations. The locations of these stations were chosen to augment the (µ, υ) coverage of the unit telescopes as well as to function as an independent interferometric array.

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Francoise Delplancke

European Southern Observatory

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Samuel A. Leveque

European Southern Observatory

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Frederic Derie

European Southern Observatory

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Andreas Glindemann

European Southern Observatory

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S. Morel

European Southern Observatory

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Alberto Gennai

European Southern Observatory

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Bertrand Bauvir

European Southern Observatory

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Bertrand Koehler

European Southern Observatory

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Roberto Abuter

European Southern Observatory

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Philippe B. Gitton

European Southern Observatory

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