The Bradford Robotic Telescope was conceived as an instrument to work with observers in other wavebands and specifically to monitor gamma sources and acquire optical counterparts to gamma-bursters. Its main line of support has been to provide an automated robotic photometry service on the Internet. Its first light was in the autumn of 1993. The telescope and its development are described (http://www.telescope.org/rti). The development of instrumentation for astronomy in an engineering department is discussed and the evolution of the networking and communications is described to the point where a fast link to the Internet BACODINE system can be achieved. The current performance is detailed with estimates of its efficiency. Images of BATSE error boxes are discussed. Current plans are to better match the field of the telescope to the BATSE error boxes and to monitor optical counterparts on a fractional second time scale.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
1 August 1996
Gamma-ray bursts: 3rd Huntsville symposium
25-27 Oct 1995
Huntsville, Alabama (USA)
Research Article|
August 01 1996
The prompt acquisition of gamma ray optical counterparts with the Bradford Robotic Telescope
J. E. F. Baruch;
J. E. F. Baruch
Engineering in Astronomy Group, Department of Industrial Technology, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7-1DP United Kingdom
Search for other works by this author on:
C. Bennett;
C. Bennett
Engineering in Astronomy Group, Department of Industrial Technology, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7-1DP United Kingdom
Search for other works by this author on:
M. J. Cox;
M. J. Cox
Engineering in Astronomy Group, Department of Industrial Technology, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7-1DP United Kingdom
Search for other works by this author on:
R. Davis
R. Davis
Engineering in Astronomy Group, Department of Industrial Technology, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7-1DP United Kingdom
Search for other works by this author on:
AIP Conf. Proc. 384, 809–813 (1996)
Citation
J. E. F. Baruch, C. Bennett, M. J. Cox, R. Davis; The prompt acquisition of gamma ray optical counterparts with the Bradford Robotic Telescope . AIP Conf. Proc. 1 August 1996; 384 (1): 809–813. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.51595
Download citation file:
Pay-Per-View Access
$40.00
Sign In
You could not be signed in. Please check your credentials and make sure you have an active account and try again.
3
Views
Citing articles via
Design of a 100 MW solar power plant on wetland in Bangladesh
Apu Kowsar, Sumon Chandra Debnath, et al.
Inkjet- and flextrail-printing of silicon polymer-based inks for local passivating contacts
Zohreh Kiaee, Andreas Lösel, et al.
Production and characterization of corncob biochar for agricultural use
Praphatsorn Rattanaphaiboon, Nigran Homdoung, et al.
Related Content
Gamma ray burst optical counterpart search experiment (GROCSE)
AIP Conference Proceedings (August 1996)
A real‐time search for optical counterparts to gamma‐ray bursts
AIP Conference Proceedings (July 1994)
BART—burst alert robotic telescope
AIP Conference Proceedings (August 1996)
The GRB coordinates network (GCN): A status report
AIP Conference Proceedings (May 1998)
Optical imaging of gamma-ray bursts with the LONEOS telescope
AIP Conference Proceedings (May 1998)