Practical stellar interferometry for space domain awareness is
challenged by the relative motions of orbital objects and telescope
arrays that require array phasing using guide stars. An orbital
object’s image sensitivity to the location and brightness of the guide
star is problematic, possibly resulting in a degraded resolution or
loss of image content when both objects fall within the
interferometer’s field of view. We characterized an orbital object’s
visibility using visibility contrast to noise ratios (
C
N
R
Δ
v
) as a performance metric for orbital
object image quality. Experimental validations included orbital object
visibility measurements for dual binary pinholes that were scaled in
size and brightness individually to match expected interferometer data
collection scenarios. We show agreement in
C
N
R
Δ
v
results, indicating resolvable
orbital object signals during periods of collection when signal
contributions from both the orbital object and guide star are present.
Expanding presented results to imaging interferometers, we discuss how
dual object imaging could degrade performance under the scenarios
examined.
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