Unveiling the Dynamic Infrared Sky with Gattini-IR
Anna M. Moore, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Christopher R. Gelino, Jacob E., Jencson, Mike I. Jones, J. Davy Kirkpatrick, Ryan M. Lau, Eran Ofek, Yuri, Petrunin, Roger Smith, Valery Terebizh, Eric Steinbring, Lin Yan

TL;DR
The paper introduces Palomar Gattini-IR, a wide-field infrared telescope designed to explore the dynamic infrared sky, enabling new discoveries in dusty regions and gravitational wave counterparts through high-cadence, large-area surveys.
Contribution
It presents the design, capabilities, and scientific potential of Palomar Gattini-IR, a novel wide-field infrared survey instrument that overcomes previous limitations in sky coverage and sensitivity.
Findings
First large-area, high-cadence infrared sky survey in the J band.
Potential to detect electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational wave events.
Establishment of a path for future infrared transient discovery.
Abstract
While optical and radio transient surveys have enjoyed a renaissance over the past decade, the dynamic infrared sky remains virtually unexplored. The infrared is a powerful tool for probing transient events in dusty regions that have high optical extinction, and for detecting the coolest of stars that are bright only at these wavelengths. The fundamental roadblocks in studying the infrared time-domain have been the overwhelmingly bright sky background (250 times brighter than optical) and the narrow field-of-view of infrared cameras (largest is 0.6 sq deg). To begin to address these challenges and open a new observational window in the infrared, we present Palomar Gattini-IR: a 25 sq degree, 300mm aperture, infrared telescope at Palomar Observatory that surveys the entire accessible sky (20,000 sq deg) to a depth of 16.4 AB mag (J band, 1.25um) every night. Palomar Gattini-IR is wider…
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