Development and Performance of the PHOT (Portable High-Speed Occultation Telescope) Systems
E. F. Young, L. A. Young, C. B. Olkin, K. Shoemaker, R. G. French, J., Regester, M. W. Buie

TL;DR
The paper details the development, deployment, and performance evaluation of the PHOT systems, portable telescopes designed for high-speed occultation observations, highlighting their components, deployment history, and observational capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces the PHOT systems, a new portable high-speed occultation telescope setup with custom timing and improved performance over previous systems.
Findings
PHOT systems have been deployed over two dozen times globally.
Achieved high photometric SNRs, e.g., 333 for Pluto occultation.
SNR estimates vary with star brightness, aperture, and frame rate.
Abstract
The PHOT (Portable High-Speed Occultation Telescope) systems were developed for the specific purpose of observing stellar occultations by solar system objects. Stellar occultations have unique observing constraints: they may only be observable from certain parts of the globe; they often require a rapid observing cadence; and they require accurate timestamp information for each exposure. The PHOT systems consist of 14" telescopes, CCD cameras, camera mounting plates, GPS-based time standards, and data acquisition computers. The PHOT systems are similar in principle to the POETS systems (Portable Occultation, Eclipse and Transit Systems, described by Souza et al. 2006 and reported on by Gulbis et al. 2008), with the main differences being (a) different CCD/Cameras with slightly different specifications and (b) a stand-alone custom-built time standard used by PHOT, whereas POETS uses a…
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