The KELT-South Telescope1

  • Pepper J
  • Kuhn R
  • Siverd R
  • et al.
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Abstract

The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) project is a survey for new transiting planets around bright stars. KELT-South is a small-aperture, wide-field automated telescope located at Sutherland, South Africa. The telescope surveys a set of 26 degree by 26 degree fields around the southern sky, and targets stars in the range of 8 < V < 10 mag, searching for transits by Hot Jupiters. This paper describes the KELT-South system hardware and software and discusses the quality of the observations. We show that KELT-South is able to achieve the necessary photometric precision to detect transits of Hot Jupiters around solar-type main-sequence stars.

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Pepper, J., Kuhn, R. B., Siverd, R., James, D., & Stassun, K. (2012). The KELT-South Telescope1. Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 124(913), 230–241. https://doi.org/10.1086/665044

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