Processing GOTO data with the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines I : Production of coadded frames
J. R. Mullaney (Sheffield), L. Makrygianni, V. Dhillon, S. Littlefair,, K. Ackley, M. Dyer, J. Lyman, K. Ulaczyk, R. Cutter, Y. L. Mong, D. Steeghs,, D. K. Galloway, P. O'Brien, G. Ramsay, S. Poshyachinda, R. Kotak, L. Nuttall,, E. Pall\'e, D. Pollacco, E. Thrane

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates adapting the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines to process GOTO survey data, producing calibrated images and catalogs with high accuracy, and releases a reusable processing package for similar high-cadence surveys.
Contribution
It shows the feasibility of using LSST pipelines for GOTO data processing and provides a generic package for other facilities to adopt this approach.
Findings
Source positions are accurate to sub-pixel levels.
Photometry achieves ~50 mmag accuracy at m_L~16.
Pipeline performance compares favorably to GOTO's in-house pipeline.
Abstract
The past few decades have seen the burgeoning of wide field, high cadence surveys, the most formidable of which will be the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) to be conducted by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory. So new is the field of systematic time-domain survey astronomy, however, that major scientific insights will continue to be obtained using smaller, more flexible systems than the LSST. One such example is the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO), whose primary science objective is the optical follow-up of Gravitational Wave events. The amount and rate of data production by GOTO and other wide-area, high-cadence surveys presents a significant challenge to data processing pipelines which need to operate in near real-time to fully exploit the time-domain. In this study, we adapt the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines to process GOTO data, thereby exploring…
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