BIFROST is the short-wavelength, high-spectral resolution instrument in the Asgard Suite of VLTI visitor instruments. It will be optimized for spectral line studies in the Y, J, and H bands (1.05-1.75 μm) that include many strong lines & molecular features. In this presentation, we outline the BIFROST science drivers that have guided our design choices and map them against the operational modes that are being implemented. We give an overview about the status of the project and the milestones from the ongoing integration & testing phase in Exeter to shipping & commissioning on Paranal, scheduled for 2025 and 2026. We review the BIFROST subsystems and discuss how they interface with the broader Asgard Suite. Finally, we outline other BIFROST-related activities pursued by our group that are intended for implementation in BIFROST as part of future upgrades.
We present science cases and instrument design considerations for the BIFROST instrument that will open the short-wavelength (Y/J/H-band), high spectral dispersion (up to R=25,000) window for the VLT Interferometer. BIFROST will be part of the Asgard Suite of instruments and unlock powerful venues for studying accretion & mass-loss processes at the early/late stages of stellar evolution, for detecting accreting protoplanets around young stars, and for probing the spin-orbit alignment in directly-imaged planetary systems and multiple star systems. Our survey on GAIA binaries aims to provide masses and precision ages for a thousand stars, providing a legacy data set for improving stellar evolutionary models as well as for Galactic Archaeology. BIFROST will enable off-axis spectroscopy of exoplanets in the 0.025-1" separation range, enabling high-SNR, high spectral resolution follow-up of exoplanets detected with ELT and JWST. We give an update on the status of the project, outline our key technology choices, and discuss synergies with other instruments in the proposed Asgard Suite of instruments.
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