Design Requirements for the Wide-field Infrared TransientExplorer (WINTER)
Danielle Frostig, John W. Baker, Joshua Brown, Richard S. Burruss,, Kristin Clark, G\'abor F\H{u}r\'esz, Nicolae Ganciu, Erik Hinrichsen, Viraj, R. Karambelkar, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Nathan P. Lourie, Andrew Malonis, Robert, A. Simcoe, Jeffry Zolkower

TL;DR
WINTER is a proposed infrared survey telescope designed to discover kilonovae and study IR transients, utilizing innovative sensors and systems engineering to meet complex scientific and technical goals.
Contribution
This paper presents the design requirements and systems engineering approach for WINTER, incorporating new IR sensors and detailed optical and safety considerations.
Findings
Successful integration of hybridized InGaAs sensors for IR detection
Development of tolerance simulation methods for IR optical design
Implementation of safety constraints for robotic telescope operation
Abstract
The Wide-field Infrared Transient Explorer (WINTER) is a 1x1 degree infrared survey telescope under development at MIT and Caltech, and slated for commissioning at Palomar Observatory in 2021. WINTER is a seeing-limited infrared time-domain survey and has two main science goals: (1) the discovery of IR kilonovae and r-process materials from binary neutron star mergers and (2) the study of general IR transients, including supernovae, tidal disruption events, and transiting exoplanets around low mass stars. We plan to meet these science goals with technologies that are relatively new to astrophysical research: hybridized InGaAs sensors as an alternative to traditional, but expensive, HgCdTe arrays and an IR-optimized 1-meter COTS telescope. To mitigate risk, optimize development efforts, and ensure that WINTER meets its science objectives, we use model-based systems engineering (MBSE)…
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