Management of a Multi-User Robotic Observatory
John Moore (1), Bruce Gendre (1,2), David Coward (1), Fiona Panther, (1), Eloise Moore (1) ((1) University of Western Australia-OzGrav, (2), University of the Virgin Islands)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the management, technical evolution, and future prospects of the Zadko Observatory, highlighting its scientific achievements and plans to develop into a space surveillance hub.
Contribution
It provides a detailed account of the observatory's operational management, technical upgrades, and strategic planning for future growth into an international space surveillance facility.
Findings
Successfully detected numerous Gamma Ray Burst afterglows.
Contributed to the discovery of colliding neutron stars in 2017.
Plays a key role in space debris tracking and mapping.
Abstract
The Zadko Observatory located approximately 70 kilometres north of Perth in the Yeal nature reserve within the Shire of Gingin, Western Australia, initially housed the 1.0 metre f/4 fast-slew Zadko Telescope which was commissioned in June 2008. Since the Zadko telescope has been in operation it has proven its worth by detecting numerous Gamma Ray Burst afterglows, two of these being the most distant 'optical transients' imaged by an Australian telescope. The Zadko telescope also contributed to the discovery of colliding neutron stars in 2017 capturing the imagination of the public. Another important use for the Zadko Telescope is the tracking and mapping of Space Debris which consist of all man-made objects, including their fragments or parts, other than active space vehicles larger than 10 microns and orbiting the Earth in outer space. The Zadko telescope forms part of the ARC Centre…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Inertial Sensor and Navigation
