Discover
/
Article

Hanbury Brown and Twiss: Important, anti-weird, beautiful

MAR 01, 2009

DOI: 10.1063/1.3099562

Donald C. Morton

Daniel Kleppner’s Reference Frame entitled “Hanbury Brown’s Steamroller” (Physics Today, August 2008, page 8 ) provided much insight into the correlation of photon counts from separate detectors. However, more than just demonstrating an interesting physical phenomenon, the technique was important for astronomy. In combination with radiant fluxes at Earth’s surface, the angular diameters of 32 hot stars measured with the intensity interferometer near Narrabri, Australia, 1 gave empirical absolute surface fluxes in erg cm−2 s−1 Hz−1 for the stars. With the UV flux measurements from the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory-2 and the longer-wavelength data from the ground, the angular diameters gave the stellar surface temperatures. 2 Previously, astronomers depended on fitting flux distributions to imperfect model atmospheres.

References

  1. 1. R. Hanbury Brown, J. Davis, L. R. Allen, Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. 137, 375 (1967) 167, 121 (1974).

  2. 2. A. D. Code, J. Davis, R. C. Bless, R. Hanbury Brown, Astrophys. J. 203, 417 (1976).https://doi.org/10.1086/154093

More about the Authors

Donald C. Morton. (don.morton@nrc.gc.ca) National Research Council Canada, Victoria, British Columbia, US .

This Content Appeared In
pt-cover_2009_03.jpeg

Volume 62, Number 3

Related content
/
Article
/
Article
/
Article
/
Article
/
Article
/
Article

Get PT in your inbox

Physics Today - The Week in Physics

The Week in Physics" is likely a reference to the regular updates or summaries of new physics research, such as those found in publications like Physics Today from AIP Publishing or on news aggregators like Phys.org.

Physics Today - Table of Contents
Physics Today - Whitepapers & Webinars
By signing up you agree to allow AIP to send you email newsletters. You further agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.