High Time Resolution Astrophysics in the Extremely Large Telescope Era : White Paper
Andy Shearer, Gottfried Kanbach, Aga S{\l}owikowska, Cesare Barbieri,, Tom Marsh, Vik Dhillon, Roberto Mignani, Dainis Dravins, Christian, Gouiff\'es, Craig Mackay, Giovanni Bonanno, Susan Collins

TL;DR
High Time Resolution Astrophysics (HTRA) enables the study of rapid astrophysical phenomena across the electromagnetic spectrum, and integrating HTRA capabilities into the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) will significantly advance understanding of extreme gravity, exoplanets, and fundamental physics.
Contribution
This white paper proposes three methods to incorporate HTRA capabilities into the E-ELT, highlighting its importance for advancing astrophysical research.
Findings
HTRA can probe extreme gravity near neutron stars and black holes.
Fast timing transits can reveal exoplanet satellite details.
Infra-red detector advancements are crucial for future HTRA developments.
Abstract
High Time Resolution Astrophysics (HTRA) concerns itself with observations on short scales normally defined as being lower than the conventional read-out time of a CCD. As such it is concerned with condensed objects such as neutron stars, black holes and white dwarfs, surfaces with extreme magnetic reconnection phenomena, as well as with planetary scale objects through transits and occultations. HTRA is the only way to make a major step forward in our understanding of several important astrophysical and physical processes; these include the extreme gravity conditions around neutron stars and stable orbits around stellar mass black holes. Transits, involving fast timing, can give vital information on the size of, and satellites around exoplanets. In the realm of fundamental physics very interesting applications lie in the regime of ultra-high time resolution, where quantum-physical…
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