Observing the Sun with the Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST): Forecasting Full-disk Observations
Mats Kirkaune, Sven Wedemeyer, Joshiwa van Marrewijk, Tony Mroczkowski, Thomas W. Morris

TL;DR
This paper explores the design parameters and scanning strategies for the future AtLAST telescope to enable rapid, full-disk solar observations at high cadence, addressing current limitations of field of view and temporal resolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a large FOV single-dish telescope like AtLAST can achieve sub-minute full-disk solar scans, enabling new high-cadence solar observations.
Findings
Double-circle scan pattern is effective for AtLAST.
Small to medium instruments can achieve <1 min cadence.
Large FOV instruments can reach second-scale cadences.
Abstract
The Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) has revolutionised the field of solar millimetre astronomy with its high angular resolution and cadence. However, with a limited field of view (FOV), targeted observations of highly dynamic phenomena such of flares are challenging. A large aperture single-dish telescope with a large FOV, such as the future Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST), would prove useful in observing such phenomena, as one could scan the full solar disk on shorter timescales. We aimed to explore what FOVs, detector counts, and scan strategies are suitable for AtLAST to push the required full-disk scan times below 1 minute, enabling regular observations of dynamic solar phenomena. Utilising the maria code, we were able to simulate solar observations with AtLAST, and thoroughly explored how instrumental properties and scanning strategies affect the…
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