Liverpool Telescope 2: a new robotic facility for rapid transient follow-up
C.M. Copperwheat, I.A. Steele, R.M. Barnsley, S.D. Bates, D. Bersier,, M.F. Bode, D. Carter, N.R. Clay, C.A. Collins, M.J. Darnley, C.J. Davis, C.M., Gutierrez, D.J. Harman, P.A. James, J. Knapen, S. Kobayashi, J.M. Marchant,, P.A. Mazzali, C.J. Mottram, C.G. Mundell, A. Newsam

TL;DR
Liverpool Telescope 2 is a rapid-response, 4-meter robotic telescope designed to capitalize on the upcoming era of time domain astronomy, enabling swift follow-up of transient events and efficient spectral classification.
Contribution
This paper presents the design and science goals of Liverpool Telescope 2, a new facility optimized for rapid transient follow-up in the era of large-scale surveys like LSST.
Findings
Designed for 30-second response to triggers
Equipped with a versatile instrument suite including a spectrograph
Aims to study fast fading transients and perform efficient spectral classification
Abstract
The Liverpool Telescope is one of the world's premier facilities for time domain astronomy. The time domain landscape is set to radically change in the coming decade, with surveys such as LSST providing huge numbers of transient detections on a nightly basis; transient detections across the electromagnetic spectrum from other facilities such as SVOM, SKA and CTA; and the era of `multi-messenger astronomy', wherein events are detected via non-electromagnetic means, such as gravitational wave emission. We describe here our plans for Liverpool Telescope 2: a new robotic telescope designed to capitalise on this new era of time domain astronomy. LT2 will be a 4-metre class facility co-located with the LT at the Observatorio del Roque de Los Muchachos on the Canary island of La Palma. The telescope will be designed for extremely rapid response: the aim is that the telescope will take data…
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