The next decade of Solar System discovery with Pan-STARRS
Abstract
The Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) at the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy is a funded project to repeatedly survey the entire visible sky to faint limiting magnitudes (mR ~ 24). It will be composed of four 1.8m diameter apertures each outfitted with fast readout orthogonal transfer Giga-pixel CCD cameras. A single aperture prototype telescopes has achieved first-light in the second half of 2006 with the full system becoming available a few years later. Roughly 60% of the surveying will be suitable for discovery of new solar system objects and it will cover the ecliptic, opposition and low solar-elongation regions. In a single lunation Pan-STARRS will detect about five times more solar system objects than the entire currently known sample. Within its first year Pan-STARRS will have detected 20,000 Kuiper Belt Objects and by the end of its ten year operational lifetime we expect to have found 107 Main Belt objects and achieve ~90% observational completeness for all NEOs larger than ~300m diameter. With these data in hand Pan-STARRS will revolutionize our knowledge of the contents and dynamical structure of the solar system.
- Publication:
-
Near Earth Objects, our Celestial Neighbors: Opportunity and Risk
- Pub Date:
- May 2007
- DOI:
- 10.1017/S1743921307003419
- Bibcode:
- 2007IAUS..236..341J
- Keywords:
-
- Survey;
- telescope;
- instrumentation;
- astrometry;
- data analysis;
- identification;
- population models