Chinese Academy of Sciences

Chinese first arrived in Antarctic Dome A in Jan. 2005 where is widely predicted to be a better astronomical site than Dome C where have a median seeing of 0.27arcsec above 30m from the ground. This paper introduces the first Chinese Antarctic telescope for Dome A (CSTAR) which is composed of four i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xiangyan Yuan, Xiangqun Cui, Genrong Liu, Fengxiang Zhai, Xuefei Gong, Ru Zhang, Lirong Xia, Jingyao Hu, J. S. Lawrence, Jun Yan, J. W. V. Storey, Lifan Wang, M. C. B. Ashley, Xu Zhou, Zhenxi Zhu
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.148.587
http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/~mcba/pubs/yuan08a.pdf
Description
Summary:Chinese first arrived in Antarctic Dome A in Jan. 2005 where is widely predicted to be a better astronomical site than Dome C where have a median seeing of 0.27arcsec above 30m from the ground. This paper introduces the first Chinese Antarctic telescope for Dome A (CSTAR) which is composed of four identical telescopes, with entrance pupil 145 mm, 20 square degree FOV and four different filters g, r, i and open band. CSTAR is mainly used for variable stars detection, measurement of atmosphere extinction, sky background and cloud coverage. Now CSTAR has been successfully deployed on Antarctic Dome A by the 24 th Chinese expedition team in Jan. 2008. It has started automatic observation since March 20, 2008 and will continuously observe the south area for the whole winter time. The limited magnitude observed is about 16.5 m with 20 seconds exposure time. CSTARS’s success is a treasurable experience and we can benefit a lot for our big telescope plans, including our three ongoing 500mm Antarctic Schmidt telescopes (AST3).