VLTI Matisse |
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Note: Point like telescopes are assumed. These tools are only provided for the technical assessment of the feasibility of observations. Variations of the atmospheric conditions can strongly affect the fringe visibility. Users are advised to apply caution in the interpretation of the results and are kindly requested to report any results which may appear inconsistent.
The VLTI Matisse is an Exposure Time Calculator. It uses a model of the VLTI and its instruments to assess the fringe visibility, given the observed bandpass, the geometry, spectrum, and coordinates of the target and the time at which the observations are to be made. It also takes into account shadowing by telescope structures and the maximum available stroke of the delay lines for the feasibility assessment of the observations.
The tool offers an HTML/Java based interface and consists of two pages. The observation parameters page presents the entry fields and widgets for the target spectrum and geometry, time of observation, instrument configuration and results selection. A "Submit" button submits the parameters to the model executed on the ESO Web server. The results page presents the computed results. The optional graphs are displayed within Java applets allowing interactive manipulation. The results are also provided in ASCII and GIF formats for further analysis and printing. Finally, a summary of the input parameters is appended to the result page.
In this section, the spectrum and geometry of the target to be observed must be defined.
Here you specify the target magnitudes, as needed.
J, H, K, or N band, needed to find matching calibrator.
Only needed if FINITO is to be used (fringe tracking in H band).
Magnitude of the target itself or its Coude offset guide star in V band to check feasibility of guiding.
Here you specify the uniform disk equivalent diameter of your target. This value is needed to predict visibility amplitudes of the target. A suitable calibrator would have amplitudes significantly larger than these to provide a reliable calibration.
Given in mas.
Given in mas.
Given in mas.
Given in mas.
Given in deg.
Given in mas.
Given in mas.
Given in mas.
Given in mas.
Best suited for planning visitor mode observations on a specific date. In service mode, January is best for RA of 8h, then advance RA by 2h for each month, e.g. April for RA of 14h, July for RA of 20, October for RA of 2h.
Best suited for planning service mode observations on any date.
Best suited for planning service mode observations on any date.
HA at which the observation shall start.
Please select the telescopes of a baseline individually.
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