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Main Authors: Harbeck, Daniel-Rolf, Taylor, Brook, Kirby, Annie, Bowman, Mark, Foale, Steve, Kadlec, Kal, McCully, Curtis, Daily, Matthew, DeVera, Jon, Douglass, Dave, Willis, Mark, Baker, Ian, Volgenau, Nikolaus, Conway, Patrick, Haworth, Brian, Estrada, Jesus, Gomez, Edward, Seale, Sandy, Hopkinson, Alice, Rios, Fernando, Kotapali, Prerana, Storrie-Lombardi, Lisa, Rosing, Wayne
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.10408
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author Harbeck, Daniel-Rolf
Taylor, Brook
Kirby, Annie
Bowman, Mark
Foale, Steve
Kadlec, Kal
McCully, Curtis
Daily, Matthew
DeVera, Jon
Douglass, Dave
Willis, Mark
Baker, Ian
Volgenau, Nikolaus
Conway, Patrick
Haworth, Brian
Estrada, Jesus
Gomez, Edward
Seale, Sandy
Hopkinson, Alice
Rios, Fernando
Kotapali, Prerana
Storrie-Lombardi, Lisa
Rosing, Wayne
author_facet Harbeck, Daniel-Rolf
Taylor, Brook
Kirby, Annie
Bowman, Mark
Foale, Steve
Kadlec, Kal
McCully, Curtis
Daily, Matthew
DeVera, Jon
Douglass, Dave
Willis, Mark
Baker, Ian
Volgenau, Nikolaus
Conway, Patrick
Haworth, Brian
Estrada, Jesus
Gomez, Edward
Seale, Sandy
Hopkinson, Alice
Rios, Fernando
Kotapali, Prerana
Storrie-Lombardi, Lisa
Rosing, Wayne
contents Las Cumbres Observatory (LCOGT) operates a global network of robotic 0.4, 1.0, and 2.0-meter telescopes to facilitate scientific research and education in time-domain astronomy. LCOGT's flagship educational program, Global Sky Partners (GSP), awards up to 1500 hours per year of telescope time to individuals and organizations that run their own, fully supported, educational programs. The GSP has a presence in 40 countries and 45% of the Partners target under-served, under-represented, and developing world audiences. The degradation and obsolescence of the original 0.4-meter telescope network prompted LCOGT to update the fleet of 10 telescopes to a new system consisting of predominantly off-the-shelf products. New PlaneWave DeltaRho 350 telescopes with Gemini Focuser/Rotators, LCOGT filter wheels, and QHY600 CMOS cameras, complement the original, custom-built mount. The deployment of all ten telescopes was completed in March 2024. We describe the design and performance of this new system and its components. We comment on modifications made to the QHY600 cameras, as well as on the treatment of random telegraph noise of its CMOS detectors within our data processing system BANZAI. The new telescope network supports the GSP program as well as multiple key science projects, including follow-up observations for the TESS satellite mission.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_10408
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle An upgraded 0.4-meter telescope fleet for Las Cumbres Observatory's Educational and Science Programs
Harbeck, Daniel-Rolf
Taylor, Brook
Kirby, Annie
Bowman, Mark
Foale, Steve
Kadlec, Kal
McCully, Curtis
Daily, Matthew
DeVera, Jon
Douglass, Dave
Willis, Mark
Baker, Ian
Volgenau, Nikolaus
Conway, Patrick
Haworth, Brian
Estrada, Jesus
Gomez, Edward
Seale, Sandy
Hopkinson, Alice
Rios, Fernando
Kotapali, Prerana
Storrie-Lombardi, Lisa
Rosing, Wayne
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Las Cumbres Observatory (LCOGT) operates a global network of robotic 0.4, 1.0, and 2.0-meter telescopes to facilitate scientific research and education in time-domain astronomy. LCOGT's flagship educational program, Global Sky Partners (GSP), awards up to 1500 hours per year of telescope time to individuals and organizations that run their own, fully supported, educational programs. The GSP has a presence in 40 countries and 45% of the Partners target under-served, under-represented, and developing world audiences. The degradation and obsolescence of the original 0.4-meter telescope network prompted LCOGT to update the fleet of 10 telescopes to a new system consisting of predominantly off-the-shelf products. New PlaneWave DeltaRho 350 telescopes with Gemini Focuser/Rotators, LCOGT filter wheels, and QHY600 CMOS cameras, complement the original, custom-built mount. The deployment of all ten telescopes was completed in March 2024. We describe the design and performance of this new system and its components. We comment on modifications made to the QHY600 cameras, as well as on the treatment of random telegraph noise of its CMOS detectors within our data processing system BANZAI. The new telescope network supports the GSP program as well as multiple key science projects, including follow-up observations for the TESS satellite mission.
title An upgraded 0.4-meter telescope fleet for Las Cumbres Observatory's Educational and Science Programs
topic Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.10408