HATSouth: a global network of fully automated identical wide-field telescopes
G. \'A. Bakos (1,2), Z. Csubry (1,2), K. Penev (1,2), D. Bayliss (3),, A. Jord\'an (4), C. Afonso (5), J. D. Hartman (1,2), T. Henning (5), G., Kov\'acs (6), R. W. Noyes (2), B. B\'eky (2), V. Suc (4), B. Cs\'ak (5), M., Rabus (4), J. L\'az\'ar (7), I. Papp (7), P. S\'ari (7)

TL;DR
HATSouth is a pioneering global network of automated telescopes designed for continuous, wide-field monitoring of the sky to discover and study transiting exoplanets, especially those with long periods and small sizes.
Contribution
It introduces the first fully automated, homogeneous telescope network capable of year-round hemisphere-wide sky monitoring for exoplanet detection.
Findings
Over 1 million science frames collected in 2 years
Photometric precision of ~6 mmag at r~10.5
Expected detection of numerous transiting exoplanets
Abstract
HATSouth is the world's first network of automated and homogeneous telescopes that is capable of year-round 24-hour monitoring of positions over an entire hemisphere of the sky. The primary scientific goal of the network is to discover and characterize a large number of transiting extrasolar planets, reaching out to long periods and down to small planetary radii. HATSouth achieves this by monitoring extended areas on the sky, deriving high precision light curves for a large number of stars, searching for the signature of planetary transits, and confirming planetary candidates with larger telescopes. HATSouth employs 6 telescope units spread over 3 locations with large longitude separation in the southern hemisphere (Las Campanas Observatory, Chile; HESS site, Namibia; Siding Spring Observatory, Australia). Each of the HATSouth units holds four 0.18m diameter f/2.8 focal ratio telescope…
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