Paper
1 August 1990 Speckle interferometry of candidate stars for two space telescope programs
David R. Blackmore, Steven J. Matcher, Brian L. Morgan, Harry A. Vine, Noel A. Argue, Graeme White
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
This paper describes the preflight programs developed for two telescope missions, the U.S. Hubble Space Telescope and the European Hipparcos, in order to remove stars showing multiple nature from a set of proposed reference stars. It was found that, in a large unbiased sample of stars, 10 percent of stars at apparent magnitudes between 9 and 13 mag are resolved in the range 0.05-1.00 arcsec. The consequence is a significant increase in the difficulty of making observations with the space telescopes. In the case of Hubble telescope, this will add to the acquisition time of Guide stars by about 11 percent. In the case of Hipparcos, it will introduce small uncorrelated proper motion errors into a number of unidentified unresolved binary stars.
© (1990) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David R. Blackmore, Steven J. Matcher, Brian L. Morgan, Harry A. Vine, Noel A. Argue, and Graeme White "Speckle interferometry of candidate stars for two space telescope programs", Proc. SPIE 1237, Amplitude and Intensity Spatial Interferometry, (1 August 1990); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.19296
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Stars

Hubble Space Telescope

Space telescopes

Interferometry

Telescopes

Speckle

Error analysis

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