Low-Cost Access to the Deep, High-Cadence Sky: the Argus Optical Array
Nicholas M. Law, Hank Corbett, Nathan W. Galliher, Ramses Gonzalez,, Alan Vasquez, Glenn Walters, Lawrence Machia, Jeff Ratzloff, Kendall Ackley,, Chris Bizon, Christopher Clemens, Steven Cox, Steven Eikenberry, Ward S., Howard, Amy Glazier, Andrew W. Mann, Robert Quimby

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Argus Array, a cost-effective, high-cadence, all-sky telescope array using mass-produced small telescopes, enabling rapid, deep, wide-field sky surveys for transient phenomena and other astrophysical events.
Contribution
It presents a novel design for a large, all-sky telescope array that significantly reduces costs and complexity through innovative engineering and software solutions.
Findings
Argus Array can cover 20% of the sky to g=19.6 each minute
Deep coadds reach g=23.6 every five nights over 47% of the sky
Total cost of the array could be below $20 million
Abstract
New mass-produced, wide-field, small-aperture telescopes have the potential to revolutionize ground-based astronomy by greatly reducing the cost of collecting area. In this paper, we introduce a new class of large telescope based on these advances: an all-sky, arcsecond-resolution, 1000-telescope array which builds a simultaneously high-cadence and deep survey by observing the entire sky all night. As a concrete example, we describe the Argus Array, a 5m-class telescope with an all-sky field of view and the ability to reach extremely high cadences using low-noise CMOS detectors. Each 55 GPix Argus exposure covers 20% of the entire sky to g=19.6 each minute and g=21.9 each hour; a high-speed mode will allow sub-second survey cadences for short times. Deep coadds will reach g=23.6 every five nights over 47% of the sky; a larger-aperture array telescope, with an \'etendue close to the…
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