Date:
Thu, 15/12/201614:00-15:00
Location:
Kaplun buildilng, Room No. 200
Lecturer: Prof. Paul Groot
Affiliation: Radboud University
Abstract:
The short time-scale transient universe is still very
poorly explored but holds strong promises for
breakthrough discoveries. The detection of
gravitational wave counterparts and the optical
identification of fast radio bursts are but two
outstanding examples. In the lecture I will
overview the results of our group at Radboud
University to understand the population of
gravitational wave emitters in our Universe, to
understand the fast synoptic sky at optical
wavelengths and two major, upcoming projects.
The MeerLICHT optical telescope that will be
twinned with the MeerKAT/ThunderKAT radio
array to achieve the first ever 'always-on' optical-
radio synoptic survey. MeerLICHT is the prototype
of the BlackGEM telescopes and will become
operational in Spring 2017. The aim of the
BlackGEM array of telescopes is the detection of
optical counterparts to gravitational wave
counterparts. It will also produce a 'Sloan South', at
1" resolution down to 22nd magnitude in six
optical bands, as well as fully chart the sub-hour
variability of the night sky, with an array of
initially 3, eventually 15, 65cm telescopes with a
field of view of 2.7 square degrees each.
BlackGEM will become operation in mid-2018 and
be located at ESO La Silla.
Additional details of the upcoming Astrophysics'
seminars can be found on the following link.
האירוע הזה כולל שיחת וידאו ב-Google Hangouts.
הצטרף: https://plus.google.com/hangouts/_/mail.huji.ac.il/astrophysics?hceid=bWFpbC5odWppLmFjLmlsX2c0czhydDlpcmhwZzRvdGNybWIzZGFqcjdvQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20.4eoda2pnkikplqv55cfo5iciik&hs=121