Paper
3 January 2020 The Huntsman Telescope: lessons learned from building an autonomous telescope from COTS components
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Huntsman Telescope* is a wide field imager based on the successful Dragonfly Telescope concept.1 It consists of an array of co-aligned telephoto DSLR lenses with cooled CCD cameras. The ten 140 mm apertures have a combined collecting area equivalent to a 0.5 m class telescope but have lower stray light levels than a typical telescope of this size.1, 2 Its primary purpose is low surface brightness imaging of nearby galaxies, and it also observes exoplanet transits and other optical transients.
© (2020) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Anthony Horton, Lee Spitler, Wilfred Gee, Fergus Longbottom, Jaime Alvarado-Montes, Amir Bazkiaei, Sarah Caddy, and Steven Lee "The Huntsman Telescope: lessons learned from building an autonomous telescope from COTS components", Proc. SPIE 11203, Advances in Optical Astronomical Instrumentation 2019, 1120306 (3 January 2020); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2539579
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KEYWORDS
Telescopes

Commercial off the shelf technology

Observatories

Lenses

Astronomical telescopes

Astronomy

CCD cameras

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