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Science Programs for a 2-m Class Telescope at Dome C, Antarctica: PILOT, the Pathfinder for an International Large Optical Telescope

Authors :
Matthew Whiting
Wilfred M. Walsh
Peter G. Tuthill
Michael C. B. Ashley
Jon Lawrence
Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Rob Sharp
Sarah T. Maddison
P. C. M. Yock
Geraint F. Lewis
Michael G. Burton
C. H. Smith
Ian A. Bond
Timothy R. Bedding
Jeremy Bailey
C. G. Tinney
Chris Blake
M. G. Hidas
Andrew Walsh
Vincent Minier
Karl Glazebrook
Seppo Mattila
John W. V. Storey
Stuart D. Ryder
Steven N. Longmore
David D. Woods
Tony Wong
Source :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia. 22:199-235
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2005.

Abstract

The cold, dry and stable air above the summits of the Antarctic plateau provides the best ground-based observing conditions from optical to sub-mm wavelengths to be found on the Earth. PILOT is a proposed 2 m telescope, to be built at Dome C in Antarctica, able to exploit these conditions for conducting astronomy at optical and infrared wavelengths. While PILOT is intended as a pathfinder towards the construction of future grand-design facilities, it will also be able to undertake a range of fundamental science investigations in its own right. This paper provides the performance specifications for PILOT, including its instrumentation. It then describes the kinds of science projects that it could best conduct. These range from planetary science to the search for other solar systems, from star formation within the Galaxy to the star formation history of the Universe, and from gravitational lensing caused by exo-planets to that produced by the cosmic web of dark matter. PILOT would be particularly powerful for wide-field imaging at infrared wavelengths, achieving near-diffraction limited performance with simple tip-tilt wavefront correction. PILOT would also be capable of near-diffraction limited performance in the optical wavebands, as well be able to open new wavebands for regular ground based observation; in the mid-IR from 17 to 40 microns and in the sub-mm at 200 microns.<br />74 pages, 14 figures, PASA, in press

Details

ISSN :
14486083 and 13233580
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f1bdd4d6db4f4596209afa5db8254739