Astrophysics Seminar
Tuesday 10 April 2018, 3:15pm to 4:15pm
Venue
Physics C036 - View MapOpen to
Alumni, Applicants, Postgraduates, Prospective Undergraduate Students, Public, Staff, UndergraduatesRegistration
Registration not required - just turn upEvent Details
The Large Robotic Telescope: a facility for the new era of time domain astronomy
The Liverpool Telescope is a fully robotic, 2-metre class optical/infrared in operation on the Canary island of La Palma. The rapid response and flexibility of robotic telescopes make them ideal tools for study of the time variable sky. With new discovery facilities such as LSST set to revolutionise the time domain, plans are being made in Liverpool for a new robotic telescope, a 'Liverpool Telescope 2', to capitalise on this new era. The core goal of the new telescope will be the follow-up of transients. Even today our transient discovery capability outstrips our follow-up capacity, such that less than 10 per cent of new transients receive a spectroscopic classification, let alone any scientific exploitation. The follow-up gap is going to increase in size by orders of magnitude as we move into the LSST era. The same problem is inherent in the gravitational wave follow-up programme, the uncertainty in the sky position of any Advanced LIGO / Virgo detection is of the order of degrees. Surveying this error box is not the biggest problem in identifying an electromagnetic counterpart: the real challenge is distinguishing the counterpart from the many unrelated transient events in the region. The Large Robotic Telescope will be designed for the follow-up role: a fully robotic 4-metre telescope with a lightweight, fast-slewing design, providing a world-leading rapid response capability for efficient programmes of classification spectroscopy and the follow-up of fast-fading sources. In this talk I will detail the science case and provide an update on development of this new telescope.
Speaker
Chris Copperwheat
Liverpool John Moores University
Contact Details
Name | Dr Steven Williams |