Gattini : a multisite campaign for the measurement of sky brightness in Antarctica

We present the Gattini project: a multisite campaign to measure the optical sky properties above the two high altitude Antarctic astronomical sites of Dome C and Dome A. The Gattini-DomeC project, part of the IRAIT site testing campaign and ongoing since January 2006, consists of two cameras for the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:SPIE Proceedings, Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes II
Main Authors: Moore, Anna M., Allen, Graham R., Aristidi, Eric, Ashley, Michael C. B., Bedding, Tim, Beichman, Chas, Briguglio, Runa, Busso, Maurizio, Candidi, Maurizio, Ciardi, David, Cui, Xiangqun, Cutispoto, Giuseppe, Distefano, Elisa, Espy, Patrick, Everett, Jon R., Feng, Longlong, Hu, Jingyao, Jiang, Zhaoji, Kenyon, Suzanne, Kulesa, Craig A., Tothill, Nicholas F. H. (R17058)
Other Authors: Stepp, Larry M. (Editor), Gilmozzi, Roberto (Editor), Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes (Conference) (Event place)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: U.S., SPIE 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/562367
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.789783
Description
Summary:We present the Gattini project: a multisite campaign to measure the optical sky properties above the two high altitude Antarctic astronomical sites of Dome C and Dome A. The Gattini-DomeC project, part of the IRAIT site testing campaign and ongoing since January 2006, consists of two cameras for the measurement of optical sky brightness, large area cloud cover and auroral detection above the DomeC site, home of the French-Italian Concordia station. The cameras are transit in nature and are virtually identical except for the nature of the lenses. The cameras have operated successfully throughout the past two Antarctic winter seasons and here we present the first results obtained from the returned 2006 dataset. The Gattini-DomeA project will place a similar site testing facility at the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, Dome A, with observations commencing in 2008. The project forms a small part of a much larger venture coordinated by the Polar Research Institute of China as part of the International Polar Year whereby an automated site testing facility called PLATO will be traversed into the DomeA site. The status of this exciting and ambitious project with regards to the Gattini-DomeA cameras will be presented.