A
first generation of VLTI (Very Large Telescopes Interferometer) focal
instruments, AMBER in the near-infrared and MIDI in the mid-infrared,
has been already integrated and tested. New and important science
results have been obtained. These instruments combine two (for MIDI) or
three (for AMBER) beams coming from the eight telescopes installed at
Cerro Paranal (four 8-meters and four/five 1.8-meters telescopes).
In
order to improve the capabilities of the interferometer and to engage a
new scientific prospective, the second generation of VLTI instruments
is currently under study. MATISSE (Multi-AperTure
mid-Infrared SpectroScopic Experiment) belongs
to this second generation. MATISSE objective is the image
reconstruction. It will extend the astrophysical potential of the VLTI
by overcoming the ambiguities existing in the interpretation of simple
visibility measurements. It is a spectro-interferometer combining up to
four beams with a large spectral coverage ranging from 3 to 25
µm
(L, M, N and Q bands). Different spectral resolutions (between 30 and
1500) are foreseen. MATISSE will measure closure phase relations thus
offering an efficient capability for image reconstruction. A
possible recombination mode of MATISSE is similar to the AMBER beam
combination, but has been adapted to the constraints specific to the
mid-infrared domain.