Bibcode
Copley, David; Ashley, Richard; Bates, Stuart; Bento, João.; Buntin, Sebastian; Copperwheat, Chris; Garner, Adam; Garton, Beth; Heffernan, David; Jermak, Helen; Law, David; McGrath, Adrian; Miossec, Chloé; Ranjbar, Ali; Smith, Robert; Steele, Iain; Goded, Alejandra; Gutiérrez, Carlos M.; Prieto, Alberto; Puga, Marta; Quintana, César; Rebolo, Rafael; De Cos, Javier; Gracia Rodriguez, Javier; Rodríguez Pereira, César; Sánchez Lasheras, Fernando; Abárzuza, Fernando
Bibliographical reference
Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes X
Advertised on:
8
2024
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
The 4m class New Robotic Telescope (NRT) is an optical facility designed to revolutionize the rapid follow-up and classification of variable and transient objects. The project is at the stage where key systems are progressing through their detailed design phases, which presents a major engineering challenge for all project partners to manage design progress of the high-level interfacing systems while still ensuring the delivery of top-level science requirements. The freezing of key system architecture features at the preliminary design review in 2021 has allowed significant progress to be made towards a target of Engineering First Light (EFL) in 2027. The project critical path is currently driven by the optics and the enclosure. Both of these components are novel in design: the NRT will have an 18-segment primary mirror and a large, fully-opening clamshell enclosure. Particular progress has been made regarding enclosure design, software & control, science & operations software and the focal station and associated science support instrumentation. The Critical Design Review for the M3 (fold mirror) was completed Q4 2022 which enabled manufacturing of the first NRT glassware to begin and prototyping of the complete opto-mechanical, hardware and software subsystem for its control to take place. The NRT will join the 2m Liverpool Telescope on La Palma, and as such this existing facility has been exploited to prototype the new science operations user interface and the NRT wavefront sensor.