VSTPOL: making the VST a large survey telescope for optical polarimetry
P. Schipani, S. Covino, F. Snik, M. Colapietro, F. Perrotta, S. Savarese, S. Bagnulo, P. Bellutti, G. Capasso, E. Cappellaro, M. Cappi, G. Castignani, S. DOrsi, J. Farinato, O. Hainaut, D. Hutsemekers, K. Kuijken, A. M. Magalhaes, D. Magrin, M. Marconi, L. Marty, F. Patat

TL;DR
VSTPOL aims to transform the VST into the first large survey telescope dedicated to optical polarimetry, enabling unique wide-field polarimetric observations to support diverse scientific research.
Contribution
The paper introduces VSTPOL, a novel upgrade to the VST that adds wide-field optical polarimetric capabilities, making it the first large survey telescope for linear optical polarimetry.
Findings
Polarimetric systematic errors can be corrected to ~10^{-3}.
VSTPOL will enhance the VST's scientific capabilities.
The project supports diverse science cases, including CTA support.
Abstract
Since the start of operations in 2011, the VLT Survey Telescope (VST) has been one of the most efficient wide-field imagers in the optical bands. However, in the next years the Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) will be a game-changer in this field. Hence, the timing is appropriate for specializing the VST with additions that can make it unique in well-defined scientific cases. VSTPOL is a project that aims to provide the addition of wide-field polarimetric capabilities to the VST telescope, making it the first large survey telescope for linear optical polarimetry. Actually, while there are quite a number of optical telescopes, the telescopes providing polarimetric instrumentation are just a few. The number of relatively large mirror polarimetric telescopes is small, although they would be specifically needed e.g. to support many science cases of the…
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