The inside-out, upside-down telescope: the Argus Array's new pseudofocal design
Nicholas Law, Alan Vasquez Soto, Hank Corbett, Nathan, Galliher, Ramses Gonzalez, Lawrence Machia, Glenn Walters

TL;DR
The Argus Array is a novel all-sky, high-resolution telescope system using a unique pseudofocal design that enables fast, deep, and wide-area sky surveys with reduced cost and complexity.
Contribution
This paper introduces a new pseudofocal array arrangement for the Argus Array, simplifying construction and operation by mounting telescopes inside a hemispherical bowl.
Findings
Prototype with 38 telescopes demonstrates feasibility.
Design reduces cost and complexity by eliminating external dome.
Achieves high-cadence, deep-sky observations over large sky areas.
Abstract
The Argus Optical Array will be the first all-sky, arcsecond-resolution, 5-m class telescope. The 55 GPix Array, currently being prototyped, will consist of 900 telescopes with 61 MPix very-low-noise CMOS detectors enabling sub-second cadences. Argus will observe every part of the northern sky for 6-12 hours per night, achieving a simultaneously high-cadence and deep-sky survey. The array will build a two-color, million-epoch movie, reaching dark-sky depths of =19.6 each minute and =23.6 each week over 47% of the entire sky, enabling the most-sensitive-yet searches for high-speed transients, gravitational-wave counterparts, exoplanet microlensing events, and a host of other phenomena. In this paper we present our newly-developed array arrangement, which mounts all telescopes into the inside of a hemispherical bowl (turning the original dome design inside-out). The telescopes'…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
