Paper
29 July 2010 A portable observatory for persistent monitoring of the night sky
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Abstract
We describe the design and operation of a small, transportable, robotic observatory that has been developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory. This small observatory, called RQD2 (Raptor-Q Design 2), is the prototype for nodes in a global network capable of continuous persistent monitoring of the night sky. The observatory employs five wide-field imagers that altogether view about 90% of the sky above 12 degrees elevation with a sensitivity of R=10 magnitude in 10 seconds. Operating robotically, the RQD2 system acquires a nearly full-sky image every 20 seconds, taking more than 10,000 individual images per night. It also runs real-time astrometric and photometric pipelines that provide both a capability to autonomously search for bright astronomical transients and monitor the variability of optical extinction across the full sky. The first RQD2 observatory began operation in March 2009 and is currently operating at the Fenton Hill site located near Los Alamos, NM.We present a detailed description of the RQD2 system and the data taken during the first several months of operation.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
James Wren, W. Thomas Vestrand, Przemek Wozniak, and Heath Davis "A portable observatory for persistent monitoring of the night sky", Proc. SPIE 7737, Observatory Operations: Strategies, Processes, and Systems III, 773723 (29 July 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.859039
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Cameras

Observatories

Control systems

Telescopes

Robotics

Astronomy

Calibration

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