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The COAST Interferometer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 July 2016

G. C. Cox*
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge, Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory, Cavendish Laboratory, Madingley Road, Cambridge. CB3 0HE

Abstract

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The Cambridge Optical Aperture Synthesis Telescope (COAST) [1] will be the first instrument of its kind to exploit the techniques of aperture synthesis and closure phase to produce very high resolution (one milliarcsecond) optical images. The instrument will consist of four identical independent mobile 40 cm telescopes, and an optical building incorporating the path compensators and the fringe and acquisition and auto-guider detector systems. The present status is; there are three operational telescopes on site with two fully functional path compensator trolleys, an acquisition and auto-guider system capable of controlling up to four telescopes, correlator and a fringe detector system.

Type
Optical and Infrared Interferometers and Arrays
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1994 

References

[1] Baldwin, J. E.: 1987, ‘Imaging By Optical Aperture Synthesis’, Interferometric Imaging in Astronomy, ESO/NOAO workshop, p 139.Google Scholar
[2] Boysen, R. C., Rogers, R.: 1991, ‘The Design of COAST’, High Resolution Imaging by Interferometry II, Proceedings. Google Scholar
[3] Cox, G. C.: 1991, ‘COAST – Acquisition and Auto-guider System’, High Resolution Imaging by Interferometry II, Proceedings. Google Scholar
[4] Buscher, D. F.: 1988, ‘Getting the most out of COAST’, .Google Scholar
[5] Nightingale, N. S.: 1991, ‘A New Silicon Avalanche Photodiode Photon Counting Detector Module For Astronomy’, Exp. Ast. 1, p 407.Google Scholar