Site Selection for the Second Flyeye Telescope: A Simulation Study for Optimizing Near-Earth Object Discovery
D. F\"ohring, L. Conversi, M. Micheli, E. D\"olling, P. Ramirez Moreta

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to evaluate optimal locations for a second Flyeye telescope to enhance Near-Earth Object detection, considering existing and upcoming survey capabilities across hemispheres.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation-based approach to identify optimal geographic locations for the second Flyeye telescope to maximize NEO discovery.
Findings
Southern Hemisphere Flyeye complements Northern Hemisphere in detection.
Combined hemispheric setup maximizes detection and unique object identification.
La Silla site offers optimal atmospheric conditions for the telescope.
Abstract
The European Space Agency (ESA) is developing a network of wide-field survey telescopes, named Flyeye, to improve the discovery of Near-Earth Objects (NEOs). The first telescope in the network will be located in the Northern Hemisphere on Mount Mufara (Italy), and a second Flyeye telescope, featuring increased detection capabilities, has just started the critical design phase. The potential location for the second Flyeye telescope is investigated by performing simulations of NEOs on impacting trajectories. Approximately 3000 impacting asteroids of two absolute magnitudes (H=25 and H=28) were propagated and tested for detectability by major existing surveys (Catalina, Pan-STARRS, ATLAS), the upcoming Vera Rubin Observatory (LSST), and possible Flyeye locations. Chile, South Africa, and a second facility in the Northern Hemisphere were considered. For each observatory, their past or…
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