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Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

The PLATO Dome A site-testing observatory: Power generation and control systems

Jon Lawrence; Michael C. B. Ashley; Shane Hengst; D. M. Luong-Van; John W. V. Storey; Huigen Yang; Xingfei Zhou; Z. Zhu

The atmospheric conditions above Dome A, a currently unmanned location at the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, are uniquely suited to astronomy. For certain types of astronomy Dome A is likely to be the best location on the planet, and this has motivated the development of the Plateau Observatory (PLATO). PLATO was deployed to Dome A in early 2008. It houses a suite of purpose-built site-testing instruments designed to quantify the benefits of Dome A site for astronomy, and science instruments designed to take advantage of the observing conditions. The PLATO power generation and control system is designed to provide continuous power and heat, and a high-reliability command and communications platform for these instruments. PLATO has run and collected data throughout the winter 2008 season completely unattended. Here we present a detailed description of the power generation, power control, thermal management, instrument interface, and communications systems for PLATO, and an overview of the system performance for 2008.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

The PLATO Antarctic site testing observatory

Jon Lawrence; G. R. Allen; Michael C. B. Ashley; Colin S. Bonner; Stuart Bradley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Craig Kulesa; Y. Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Anna M. Moore; Carlton R. Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Bo Sun; N. Suntzeff; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Christopher K. Walker; Lifan Wang; Jun Yan; Ji Yang; Huigen Yang

Over a decade of site testing in Antarctica has shown that both South Pole and Dome C are exceptional sites for astronomy, with certain atmospheric conditions superior to those at existing mid-latitude sites. However, the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, Dome A, is expected to experience colder atmospheric temperatures, lower wind speeds, and a turbulent boundary layer that is confined closer to the ground. The Polar Research Institute of China, who were the first to visit the Dome A site in January 2005, plan to establish a permanently manned station there within the next decade. As part of this process they conducted a second expedition to Dome A, arriving via overland traverse in January 2008. This traverse involved the delivery and installation of the PLATeau Observatory (PLATO). PLATO is an automated self-powered astrophysical site testing observatory, developed by the University of New South Wales. A number of international institutions have contributed site testing instruments measuring turbulence, optical sky background, and sub-millimetre transparency. In addition, a set of science instruments are providing wide-field high time resolution optical photometry and terahertz imaging of the Galaxy. We present here an overview of the PLATO system design and instrumentation suite.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Gattini 2010: cutting edge science at the bottom of the world

Anna M. Moore; Sara Ahmed; Michael C. B. Ashley; Max K. Barreto; Xiangqun Cui; Alex Delacroix; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Jon Lawrence; D. M. Luong-Van; D. Christopher Martin; Reed Riddle; Nicole Rowley; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Lifan Wang; Huigen Yang; Ji Yang; Xu Zhou; Z. Zhu

The high altitude Antarctic sites of Dome A and the South Pole offer intriguing locations for future large scale optical astronomical Observatories. The Gattini project was created to measure the optical sky brightness, large area cloud cover and aurora of the winter-time sky above such high altitude Antarctic sites. The Gattini- DomeA camera was installed on the PLATO instrument module as part of the Chinese-led traverse to the highest point on the Antarctic plateau in January 2008. This single automated wide field camera contains a suite of Bessel photometric filters (B, V, R) and a long-pass red filter for the detection and monitoring of OH emission. We have in hand one complete winter-time dataset (2009) from the camera that was recently returned in April 2010. The Gattini-South Pole UV camera is a wide-field optical camera that in 2011 will measure for the first time the UV properties of the winter-time sky above the South Pole dark sector. This unique dataset will consist of frequent images taken in both broadband U and B filters in addition to high resolution (R~5000) long slit spectroscopy over a narrow bandwidth of the central field. The camera is a proof of concept for the 2m-class Antarctic Cosmic Web Imager telescope, a dedicated experiment to directly detect and map the redshifted lyman alpha fluorescence or Cosmic Web emission we believe possible due to the unique geographical qualities of the site. We present the current status of both projects.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Optical sky brightness at Dome A, Antarctica, from the Nigel experiment

Geoff Sims; Michael C. B. Ashley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; Zhongwen Hu; Jon Lawrence; D. M. Luong-Van; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Lifan Wang; Huigen Yang; Ji Yang; Xu Zhou; Z. Zhu

Nigel is a fiber-fed UV/visible grating spectrograph with a thermoelectrically-cooled 256×1024 pixel CCD camera, designed to measure the twilight and night sky brightness from 300nm to 850 nm. Nigel has three pairs of fibers, each with a field-of-view with an angular diameter of 25 degrees, pointing in three fixed positions towards the sky. The bare fibers are exposed to the sky with no additional optics. The instrument was deployed at Dome A, Antarctica in January 2009 as part of the PLATO (PLATeau Observatory) robotic observatory. During the 2009 winter, Nigel made approximately six months of continuous observations of the sky, with typically 104 deadtime between exposures. The resulting spectra provide quantitative information on the sky brightness, the auroral contribution, and the water vapour content of the atmosphere. We present details of the design, construction and calibration of the Nigel spectrometer, as well some sample spectra from a preliminary analysis.


Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union | 2009

The PLATO observatory: robotic astronomy from the Antarctic plateau

Michael C. B. Ashley; Graham S. Allen; Colin S. Bonner; Stuart Bradley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Craig Kulesa; Jon Lawrence; Yan Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Mark J. McCaughrean; Anna M. Moore; Carl R. Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Bo Sun; N. Suntzeff; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Christopher K. Walker; Lifan Wang; Jun Yan; Huigen Yang

PLATO is a 6 tonne completely self-contained robotic observatory that provides its own heat, electricity, and satellite communications. It was deployed to Dome A in Antarctica in January 2008 by the Chinese expedition team, and is now in its second year of operation. PLATO is operating four 14.5cm optical telescopes with 1k×1k CCDs, a wide-field sky camera with a 2k×2k CCD and Sloan g, r, i filters, a fibre-fed spectrograph to measure the UV to near-IR sky spectrum, a 0.2m terahertz telescope, two sonic radars giving 1m resolution data on the boundary layer to a height of 180m, a 15m tower, meteorological sensors, and 8 web cameras. Beginning in 2010/11 PLATO will be upgraded to support a Multi Aperture Scintillation Sensor and three AST3 0.5m schmidt telescopes, with 10k×10k CCDs and 100TB/annum data requirements.


Eas Publications Series | 2010

DOME A SITE TESTING AND FUTURE PLANS

Xuefei Gong; Lingzhi Wang; Xiangqun Cui; Long-Long Feng; Xiangyan Yuan; Michael C. B. Ashley; Graham S. Allen; Colin S. Bonner; Stuart Bradley; Jon R. Everett; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Craig Kulesa; J. S. Lawrence; Yan Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Mark J. McCaughrean; Anna M. Moore; Carlton A Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Bo Sun; N. Suntzeff; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Christopher K. Walker; Jun Yan


Eas Publications Series | 2008

Astrophysics from Dome A

N. F. H. Tothill; Craig Kulesa; Christopher K. Walker; Michael C. B. Ashley; Colin S. Bonner; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Jon Lawrence; Y. Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Anna M. Moore; Carl R. Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; John W. V. Storey; Zhaohui Shang; Bo Sun; Tony Travouillon; Lifan Wang; Z. Xu; Huigen Yang; Jun Yan; Donald G. York; Xiangyan Yuan; Z. Zhu


Eas Publications Series | 2010

PLATO–a robotic observatory for the Antarctic plateau

Michael C. B. Ashley; Graham S. Allen; Colin S. Bonner; Stuart Bradley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Craig Kulesa; Jon Lawrence; Y. Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Mark J. McCaughrean; Anna M. Moore; Carl R. Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Bo Sun; N. Suntzeff; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Christopher K. Walker; Lingzhi Wang; Jun Yan; Huigen Yang


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Performance of the autonomous PLATO Antarctic Observatory over two full years

D. M. Luong-Van; Michael C. B. Ashley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; Jon Lawrence; John W. V. Storey; Lifan Wang; Huigen Yang; Ji Yang; Xu Zhou; Z. Zhu


EPJ Web of Conferences | 2017

Stellar variability from Dome A, Antarctica

Lingzhi Wang; L.M. Macri; B. Ma; Lifan Wang; Michael C. B. Ashley; Xiao-Hong Cui; F.J. Du; J.N. Fu; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Y. Hu; G. Li; X.Y. Li; Z.Y. Li; J. S. Lawrence; D. M. Luong-Van; Carlton R. Pennypacker; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Huigen Yang; Xiangyan Yuan; D. G. York; Xingfei Zhou; Z. Zhu; J.L. Zhou; M. Catelan; W. Gieren

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Michael C. B. Ashley

University of New South Wales

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D. M. Luong-Van

University of New South Wales

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John W. V. Storey

University of New South Wales

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Long-Long Feng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Huigen Yang

Polar Research Institute of China

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Jon R. Everett

University of New South Wales

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Xuefei Gong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhaohui Shang

Tianjin Normal University

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Jon Lawrence

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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