NELIOTA: The wide-field, high-cadence lunar monitoring system at the prime focus of the Kryoneri telescope
E.M. Xilouris, A.Z. Bonanos, I. Bellas-Velidis, P. Boumis, A., Dapergolas, A. Maroussis, A. Liakos, I. Alikakos, V. Charmandaris, G. Dimou,, A. Fytsilis, M. Kelley, D. Koschny, V. Navarro, K. Tsiganis, and K. Tsinganos

TL;DR
NELIOTA is a novel lunar monitoring system using a wide-field, high-cadence dual-band camera at Kryoneri telescope, enabling detection and temperature analysis of small NEO impact flashes on the Moon with unprecedented sensitivity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a specially designed twin camera system with high-cadence, multicolor capabilities for lunar impact monitoring, providing new insights into impact flash detection and characterization.
Findings
Detected 31 NEO impact flashes in the first year.
Achieved detection of impact flashes as faint as 11.24 mag.
Estimated impact rate of approximately 2×10^{-7} events km^{-2} h^{-1}.
Abstract
We present the technical specifications and first results of the ESA-funded, lunar monitoring project "NELIOTA" (NEO Lunar Impacts and Optical TrAnsients) at the National Observatory of Athens, which aims to determine the size-frequency distribution of small Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) via detection of impact flashes on the surface of the Moon. For the purposes of this project a twin camera instrument was specially designed and installed at the 1.2 m Kryoneri telescope utilizing the fast-frame capabilities of scientific Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor detectors (sCMOS). The system provides a wide field-of-view (17.0' 14.4') and simultaneous observations in two photometric bands (R and I), reaching limiting magnitudes of 18.7 mag in 10 sec in both bands at a 2.5 signal-to-noise level. This makes it a unique instrument that can be used for the detection of NEO impacts on…
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