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Proving the outstanding capabilities of IACTs in high time resolution optical astronomy

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 Added by Tarek Hassan
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes (IACTs) are very-large telescopes designed to detect the nanosecond-timescale flashes produced within extended air showers. Because IACTs are sensitive to the Cherenkov light (UV/blue) and use photodetectors with extremely fast time responses, they are also able to perform simultaneous optical observations. The large reflecting areas of these telescopes (larger than 100 m$^2$) makes them well-suited to studying fast optical transient phenomena with timescales ranging from seconds to milliseconds to nanoseconds, and the unique optical design provides a wide field of view monitoring capability with a modest point spread function. VERITAS, with its recently upgraded PMT current monitoring instrumentation, was able to provide the first detection of asteroid occultations with an IACT, resulting in the highest angular resolution measurements for stellar diameters ever taken in the visible band range. Here we explore the feasibility of using this technique to significantly expand the number of stars with directly measured stellar radii, usable for population studies to test stellar evolution modelling or transiting exoplanet radius measurements. A single observatory with a high-speed visible-band photometer with a sensitivity reaching the 13$^{th}$ magnitude could increase the number of directly measured K stars diameters by 50%.

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The science cases for incorporating high time resolution capabilities into modern radio telescopes are as numerous as they are compelling. Science targets range from exotic sources such as pulsars, to our Sun, to recently detected possible extragalactic bursts of radio emission, the so-called fast radio bursts (FRBs). Originally conceived purely as an imaging telescope, the initial design of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) did not include the ability to access high time and frequency resolution voltage data. However, the flexibility of the MWAs software correlator allowed an off-the-shelf solution for adding this capability. This paper describes the system that records the 100 micro-second and 10 kHz resolution voltage data from the MWA. Example science applications, where this capability is critical, are presented, as well as accompanying commissioning results from this mode to demonstrate verification.
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