English

Why Chromatic Imaging Matters

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2018-12-26 v1

Abstract

During the last two decades, the first generation of beam combiners at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer has proved the importance of optical interferometry for high-angular resolution astrophysical studies in the near- and mid-infrared. With the advent of 4-beam combiners at the VLTI, the u-v coverage per pointing increases significantly, providing an opportunity to use reconstructed images as powerful scientific tools. Therefore, interferometric imaging is already a key feature of the new generation of VLTI instruments, as well as for other interferometric facilities like CHARA and JWST. It is thus imperative to account for the current image reconstruction capabilities and their expected evolutions in the coming years. Here, we present a general overview of the current situation of optical interferometric image reconstruction with a focus on new wavelength-dependent information, highlighting its main advantages and limitations. As an Appendix we include several cookbooks describing the usage and installation of several state-of-the art image reconstruction packages. To illustrate the current capabilities of the software available to the community, we recovered chromatic images, from simulated MATISSE data, using the MCMC software SQUEEZE. With these images, we aim at showing the importance of selecting good regularization functions and their impact on the reconstruction.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1812.06191,
  title  = {Why Chromatic Imaging Matters},
  author = {Joel Sanchez-Bermudez and Florentin Millour and Fabien Baron and Roy van Boekel and Laurent Bourgès and Gilles Duvert and Paulo J. V. Garcia and Nuno Gomes and Karl-Heinz Hofmann and Thomas Henning and Jacob W. Isbell and Bruno Lopez and Alexis Matter and J-Uwe Pott and Dieter Schertl and Eric Thiébaut and Gerd Weigelt and John Young},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.06191},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in Experimental Astronomy as part of the topical collection: Future of Optical-infrared Interferometry in Europe

R2 v1 2026-06-23T06:43:11.930Z