The Tsinghua University-Ma Huateng Telescopes for Survey: Overview and Performance of the System
Ji-Cheng Zhang, Xiao-Feng Wang, Jun Mo, Gao-Bo Xi, Jie Lin, Xiao-Jun, Jiang, Xiao-Ming Zhang, Wen-Xiong Li, Sheng-Yu Yan, Zhi-Hao Chen, Lei Hu, Xue, Li, Wei-Li Lin, Han Lin, Cheng Miao, Li-Ming Rui, Han-Na Sai, Dan-Feng Xiang,, and Xing-Han Zhang

TL;DR
The TMTS system is a multi-telescope array designed for simultaneous multi-band optical surveys, enabling rapid detection and characterization of transient objects with a wide field of view and high sensitivity.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design, capabilities, and initial performance of the TMTS system, a novel multi-telescope array for simultaneous multi-band optical sky surveys.
Findings
Achieves a 3σ detection limit of ~19.4 mag in luminous filter for 60s exposure.
Provides a combined field of view of up to 18 deg² with four telescopes.
Demonstrates initial transient discoveries during early survey months.
Abstract
Over the past decade, time-domain astronomy in optical bands has developed rapidly with the operations of some wide-field survey facilities. However, most of these surveys are conducted with only a single band, and simultaneous color information is usually unavailable for the objects monitored during the survey. Here we present introductions to the system of Tsinghua University-Ma Huateng Telescopes for Survey (TMTS), which consists of an array of four optical telescopes installed on a single equatorial mount. Such a system is designed to get multiband photometry simultaneously for stars and transients discovered during the survey. The optics of each telescope is a modified Hamilton-Newtonian system, covering the wavelengths from 400 to 900 nm, with a field of view (FoV) of about 4.5 deg2 and a plate scale of 1.86"/pixel when combining with a 4K*4K QHY4040 CMOS detector. The TMTS system…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
