Evryscope science: exploring the potential of all-sky gigapixel-scale telescopes
Nicholas M. Law, Octavi Fors, Jeffrey Ratzloff, Philip Wulfken, Dustin, Kavanaugh, David J. Sitar, Zachary Pruett, Mariah Birchart, Brad Barlow, Kipp, Cannon, S. Bradley Cenko, Bart Dunlap, Adam Kraus, Thomas J. Maccarone

TL;DR
The paper discusses the potential of all-sky gigapixel-scale telescopes like Evryscope, which can observe the entire accessible sky simultaneously, enabling diverse astronomical research including exoplanets, stellar variability, and transient events.
Contribution
It introduces the Evryscope, a novel all-sky, gigapixel-scale telescope array that provides high-cadence, wide-field observations with a simple design, expanding capabilities for time-domain astronomy.
Findings
Evryscope covers 8,660 sq. degrees per exposure with 780 MPix.
It achieves 1% photometric precision for stars brighter than mV=16.5.
The system can detect and monitor rare transient events and exoplanets.
Abstract
Low-cost mass-produced sensors and optics have recently made it feasible to build telescope arrays which observe the entire accessible sky simultaneously. In this article we discuss the scientific motivation for these telescopes, including exoplanets, stellar variability and extragalactic transients. To provide a concrete example we detail the goals and expectations for the Evryscope, an under-construction 780 MPix telescope which covers 8,660 square degrees in each two-minute exposure; each night, 18,400 square degrees will be continuously observed for an average of approximately 6 hours. Despite its small 61mm aperture, the system's large field of view provides an etendue which is ~10% of LSST. The Evryscope, which places 27 separate individual telescopes into a common mount which tracks the entire accessible sky with only one moving part, will return 1%-precision, many-year-length,…
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