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The bright star survey telescope for the planetary transit survey in Antarctica

Authors :
Xiangyan Yuan
Jia-jing Liu
Shu-cheng Dong
Fujia Du
Guang-yu Zhang
Peng Jiang
Jie Chen
Hui-Gen Liu
Haiping Lu
Minghao Jia
Zhiyong Zhang
Liang Chang
Zhengyang Li
Qiguo Tian
Luming Sun
Shaohua Zhang
Xiheng Shi
Hui Zhang
Jian Wang
Junyan Zhou
Lifan Wang
Xiang Pan
Ji-Lin Zhou
Xiaoyan Li
Hongyan Zhou
Feng-xin Jiang
Jianguo Wang
Tuo Ji
Hong-fei Zhang
Source :
Science Bulletin. 61:383-390
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Transiting extrasolar planets (exoplanets), especially those orbiting bright stars, are desired for study of the diversity of planetary compositions, internal structures and atmospheres beyond our solar system. Dome A at Antarctica is a promising site for planetary transit surveys, where the continuous darkness and the large clear-sky fraction in the winter months greatly enhance the detection efficiency. The Chinese Small Telescope ARray and the Antarctic Survey Telescopes are the first facilities that have been operated at Dome A for use in exoplanet surveys. To increase the sky coverage, a low-temperature-resistant wide-field robotic telescope, named the bright star survey telescope (BSST), has been developed to join the ongoing planetary transit survey in Antarctica. The BSST has an aperture size of 300 mm and is equipped with a large-frame 4k x 4k CCD camera to receive starlight from a 3.degrees 4 x 3.degrees 4 field of view. The BSST was operated at Lijiang observatory in April and May 2015 for a test run. Photometric precision of 3.5 mmag was achieved for stars with V similar to 11 mag using 75 s exposures. The transiting events of two Jupiter-size exoplanets, HAT-P-3b and HAT-P-12b, were observed on May 10 and May 20, 2015, respectively.

Details

ISSN :
20959273
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4b22784f3f46e50ddc503d3a867ee05f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11434-016-1015-0