Abstract

Abstract The past few decades have seen the burgeoning of wide-field, high-cadence surveys, the most formidable of which will be the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) to be conducted by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory. So new is the field of systematic time-domain survey astronomy; however, that major scientific insights will continue to be obtained using smaller, more flexible systems than the LSST. One such example is the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO) whose primary science objective is the optical follow-up of gravitational wave events. The amount and rate of data production by GOTO and other wide-area, high-cadence surveys presents a significant challenge to data processing pipelines which need to operate in near-real time to fully exploit the time domain. In this study, we adapt the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines to process GOTO data, thereby exploring the feasibility of using this ‘off-the-shelf’ pipeline to process data from other wide-area, high-cadence surveys. In this paper, we describe how we use the LSST Science Pipelines to process raw GOTO frames to ultimately produce calibrated coadded images and photometric source catalogues. After comparing the measured astrometry and photometry to those of matched sources from PanSTARRS DR1, we find that measured source positions are typically accurate to subpixel levels, and that measured L-band photometries are accurate to $\sim50$ mmag at $m_L\sim16$ and $\sim200$ mmag at $m_L\sim18$ . These values compare favourably to those obtained using GOTO’s primary, in-house pipeline, gotophoto, in spite of both pipelines having undergone further development and improvement beyond the implementations used in this study. Finally, we release a generic ‘obs package’ that others can build upon, should they wish to use the LSST Science Pipelines to process data from other facilities.

Highlights

  • Since the undertaking of the National Geographic Society– Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (NGS–POSS) during the 1940s and 1950s (Abell 1959; Minkowski & Abell 1963), wide-area c The Author(s), 2021

  • Throughout this section, it is worth bearing in mind that both the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) stack and GOTOPHOTO are still under active development, and subsequent updates will likely lead to improvements in the astrometric and photometric measurements of both pipelines

  • Starting with the comparison against Pan-STARRS1 Surveys (PS1), we show in the left-hand plot of Figure 10 the magnitude difference between PS1 point spread function (PSF) photometry and Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO) photometry as a function of the LSST stack-measured source magnitude

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Summary

Introduction

Since the undertaking of the National Geographic Society– Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (NGS–POSS) during the 1940s and 1950s (Abell 1959; Minkowski & Abell 1963), wide-area c The Author(s), 2021. Wide-area optical surveys such as the NGS–POSS and its southern counterpart, the ESO/SERC (Holmberg et al 1974), conducted a single pass of the sky, often in multiple filters or bandpasses in order to obtain colour or crude spectral information (i.e., spectral indices). These single-pass surveys provided astronomers with a ‘static’ view of the Universe. The past two decades, have seen significant investments in wide-area ‘time-domain’ surveys which conduct repeated passes of the sky, thereby enabling the study of how astronomical objects change over time (e.g., OGLE, Udalski, Kubiak, & Szymanski 1997; SuperWASP, Pollacco et al 2006; Catalina Sky Survey, Drake et al 2009; PanSTARRS, Chambers et al 2016; ZTF, Bellm et al 2019). As with static wide-field surveys, such timedomain surveys have been exploited to gain insights into a wide range of other phenomena, including supernovae, exoplanets, microlensing, and the variability of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), etc

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