Liverpool Telescope 2: a new robotic facility for time domain astronomy in 2020+
C.M. Copperwheat, I.A. Steele, S.D. Bates, R.J. Smith, M.F. Bode, I., Baker, T. Peacocke, K. Thomson

TL;DR
Liverpool Telescope 2 is a planned 4-meter robotic telescope on La Palma designed for rapid, follow-up observations of transient astronomical events, enhancing time domain science especially in the era of large survey facilities.
Contribution
This paper proposes the design and scientific goals of Liverpool Telescope 2, a new robotic telescope with rapid response capabilities for time domain astronomy.
Findings
Preliminary optical design studies completed.
Telescope aims for response times of a few tens of seconds.
Designed to enable spectroscopy of faint transient sources.
Abstract
The robotic 2m Liverpool Telescope, based on the Canary island of La Palma, has a diverse instrument suite and a strong track record in time domain science, with highlights including early time photometry and spectra of supernovae, measurements of the polarization of gamma-ray burst afterglows, and high cadence light curves of transiting extrasolar planets. In the next decade the time domain will become an increasingly prominent part of the astronomical agenda with new facilities such as LSST, SKA, CTA and Gaia, and promised detections of astrophysical gravitational wave and neutrino sources opening new windows on the transient universe. To capitalise on this exciting new era we intend to build Liverpool Telescope 2: a new robotic facility on La Palma dedicated to time domain science. The next generation of survey facilities will discover large numbers of new transient sources, but…
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