The wide-field infrared transient explorer (WINTER)
Nathan P. Lourie, John W. Baker, Richard S. Burruss, Mark Egan,, G\'abor F\H{u}r\'esz, Danielle Frostig, Allan A. Garcia-Zych, Nicolae Ganciu,, Kari Haworth, Erik Hinrichsen, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Viraj R. Karambelkar,, Andrew Malonis, Robert A. Simcoe, Jeffry Zolkower

TL;DR
WINTER is a new infrared survey instrument designed for rapid, wide-field observations to detect kilonovae from neutron star mergers and support multi-messenger astrophysics, with innovative IR camera technology and survey capabilities.
Contribution
The paper introduces the design and scientific goals of WINTER, a novel IR time-domain survey instrument with rapid response and wide coverage for multi-messenger astronomy.
Findings
Design of WINTER's IR camera with six InGaAs sensors
Ability to map LIGO O4 error contours within four hours
Expected to facilitate kilonova discovery and IR sky surveys
Abstract
The Wide-Field Infrared Transient Explorer (WINTER) is a new infrared time-domain survey instrument which will be deployed on a dedicated 1 meter robotic telescope at Palomar Observatory. WINTER will perform a seeing-limited time domain survey of the infrared (IR) sky, with a particular emphasis on identifying r-process material in binary neutron star (BNS) merger remnants detected by LIGO. We describe the scientific goals and survey design of the WINTER instrument. With a dedicated trigger and the ability to map the full LIGO O4 positional error contour in the IR to a distance of 190 Mpc within four hours, WINTER will be a powerful kilonova discovery engine and tool for multi-messenger astrophysics investigations. In addition to follow-up observations of merging binaries, WINTER will facilitate a wide range of time-domain astronomical observations, all the while building up a deep…
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