Paper
17 September 2012 PLATO-R: a new concept for Antarctic science
Michael C. B. Ashley, Yael Augarten, Colin S. Bonner, Michael G. Burton, Luke Bycroft, Jon S. Lawrence, Daniel M. Luong-Van, Scott McDaid, Campbell McLaren, Geoff Sims, John W. V. Storey
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
PLATO-R is an autonomous, robotic observatory that can be deployed anywhere on the Antarctic plateau by Twin Otter aircraft. It provides heat, data acquisition, communications, and up to 1kW of electric power to support astronomical and other experiments throughout the year. PLATO-R was deployed in 2012 January to Ridge A, believed to be the site with the lowest precipitable water vapour (and hence the best atmospheric transmission at terahertz frequencies) on earth.1-4 PLATO-R improves upon previous PLATO designs that were built into ten-foot shipping containers by being much smaller and lighter, allowing it to be field-deployable within 2-3 days by a crew of four.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael C. B. Ashley, Yael Augarten, Colin S. Bonner, Michael G. Burton, Luke Bycroft, Jon S. Lawrence, Daniel M. Luong-Van, Scott McDaid, Campbell McLaren, Geoff Sims, and John W. V. Storey "PLATO-R: a new concept for Antarctic science", Proc. SPIE 8444, Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes IV, 84441R (17 September 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.925514
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Observatories

Solar cells

Computing systems

Telescopes

Astronomy

Optical instrument design

Robotics

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