16 - 21 June 2024
Yokohama, Japan
Conference 13094 > Paper 13094-71
Paper 13094-71

The gravitational-wave optical transient observer (GOTO)

20 June 2024 • 16:10 - 16:30 Japan Standard Time | Room G403/404, North - 4F

Abstract

The Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO) is a project dedicated to identifying optical counterparts to gravitational-wave detections using a network of dedicated, wide-field telescopes. After almost a decade of design, construction, and commissioning work, the GOTO network is now fully operational with two antipodal sites: La Palma in the Canary Islands and Siding Spring in Australia. Both sites host two independent robotic mounts, each with a field-of-view of 44 square degrees formed by an array of eight 40cm telescopes, resulting in an instantaneous 88 square degree field-of-view per site. All four telescopes operate as a single integrated network, with the ultimate aim of surveying the entire sky every 2–3 days and allowing near-24-hour response to transient events within a minute of their detection. In the modern era of transient astronomy, automated telescopes like GOTO form a vital link between multi-messenger discovery facilities and in-depth follow-up by larger telescopes. GOTO is already producing a wide range of scientific results, assisted by an efficient discovery pipeline and a successful citizen science project: Kilonova Seekers.

Presenter

The Univ. of Sheffield (United Kingdom)
I am a Research Associate at the University of Sheffield working on the GOTO project.
Presenter/Author
The Univ. of Sheffield (United Kingdom)
Author
Kendall Ackley
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
Monash Univ. (Australia)
Author
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
Krzysztof Ulaczyk
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
Duncan K. Galloway
Monash Univ. (Australia)
Author
Vik Dhillon
The Univ. of Sheffield (United Kingdom)
Author
Univ. of Leicester (United Kingdom)
Author
Armagh Observatory & Planetarium (United Kingdom)
Author
National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (Thailand)
Author
Univ. of Turku (Finland)
Author
The Univ. of Manchester (United Kingdom)
Author
Univ. of Portsmouth (United Kingdom)
Author
Enric Pallé
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (Spain)
Author
Don Pollacco
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
Univ. of Turku (Finland)
Author
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
David O'Neill
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
Univ. of Portsmouth (United Kingdom)
Author
The Univ. of Warwick (United Kingdom)
Author
The Univ. of Sheffield (United Kingdom)