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1. Introduction

The merits of adding a polarimetric equipment to an optical interferometer has been recognized as early as 1970's from the observation of a few hot stars by the Narrabri intensity interferometer (Hanbury Brown 1974). Compared to polarimetric techniques, a polarimetric interferometer can be thought of as a slide-caliper which measures the distorsion of a scattering atmosphere seen through a linear polarizer (Cassinelli & Hoffman 1975). In practice, the detection of this distorsion needs only two series of observations: the measure of the fringe visibility through a polarizer parallel to the interferometric baseline and perpendicular to it. As pointed by Cassinelli and Hoffman this possibility works even when the polarization of the atmosphere is axially symmetric -where classical polarimetry fails to detect any effect. This applies a fortiori to the intrinsec oblate circumstellar envelopes of Be stars, PMS objects or contact binaries (Poeckert & Marlborough 1978; Fischer et al. 1996; Vakili 1981).
Polarization measurements are also relevant for calibrating systematic effects due to the differential rotation between incoming electromagnetic fields from separated telescopes (Beckers 1990; Tinbergen 1988). The present work aimed at comparing theoretical predictions of polarization effects in a stellar interferometer to actual data on the sky (Rousselet-Perraut et al. 1996). It was also initiated as part of an effort from our group to carry high spatial observations in polarized light with the GI2T new beam-combiner REGAIN (Mourard et al. 1994a). The bright Be star tex2html_wrap_inline1094 Cas presents strong polarization properties a priori (Clarke 1990) and corresponds to a suitable target for evaluating the limits of such observations on the GI2T. In the following section we describe the instrumentation and data analysis which have been used for our study. The next section describes the interpretation of our interferometric measurements based on a simple model for the extended envelope of tex2html_wrap_inline1096 Cas. The angular diameter of the envelope in the continuum is also compared to previous results of tex2html_wrap_inline1098 Cas by the Mark III and the GI2T in the Htex2html_wrap_inline1100 emission line (Quirrenbach et al. 1993; Stee et al. 1995). In the last section our analysis is used to constrain the physics of the envelope of this star. Finally we conclude on a few scientific applications of the future polarimetric mode of GI2T + REGAIN.


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