BART is a robotic observatory located at the Astronomical Institute in Ondrejov, Czech Republic. It is a relatively low-cost (25 cm + two wide-field lenses) device developed for rapid follow-ups of GRBs. Since 2001 when it started to observe, it has done several such observations. Meanwhile, photometric monitoring tasks are performed, using an intelligent selection algorithm. Not only the telescope is automatic, the entire observatory does not require human presence: system prepares the schedule, observes, registers the images and stores them into database without human intervention: human assistance is reduced to maintenance and weather checking. BART is a primary developing platform for RTS2, the robotic telescope operation software, ...
We present the first optical observations of a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow using the 2-m robotic...
The Astrophysical Institute Potsdam (AIP) and the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) inaugur...
Robotic telescopes (RTs) are changing the field of observational astronomy. Although, in the past ob...
The Watcher robotic telescope was developed primarily to perform rapid optical follow-up observation...
Robotic telescopes (RTs) are changing the field of observational astronomy. Although, in the past ob...
In the era of multi-messenger astronomy the exploration of the early emission from transients is key...
We present the capabilities of the 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT), owned and operated by Liver...
Pi of the Sky is a system of robotic telescopes designed for observations of short timescale astroph...
We provide an overview of the robotic Super-LOTIS (Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System) teles...
Funded by $1.2M in grants and donations, we are now building PROMPT at CTIO. When completed in late...
The 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT) is ideally suited to the rapid follow-up of unpredictable a...
We summarise recent deep, rapid GRB follow-up observations using the RoboNet-1.0 network which compr...
The “Pi of the Sky” robotic telescope was designed to monitor a significant fraction of the sky with...
We report on optical observations of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) followed up by our collaboration with t...
We have converted the Palomar 60 inch (1.52 m) telescope from a classic night‐assistant‐operated tel...
We present the first optical observations of a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow using the 2-m robotic...
The Astrophysical Institute Potsdam (AIP) and the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) inaugur...
Robotic telescopes (RTs) are changing the field of observational astronomy. Although, in the past ob...
The Watcher robotic telescope was developed primarily to perform rapid optical follow-up observation...
Robotic telescopes (RTs) are changing the field of observational astronomy. Although, in the past ob...
In the era of multi-messenger astronomy the exploration of the early emission from transients is key...
We present the capabilities of the 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT), owned and operated by Liver...
Pi of the Sky is a system of robotic telescopes designed for observations of short timescale astroph...
We provide an overview of the robotic Super-LOTIS (Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System) teles...
Funded by $1.2M in grants and donations, we are now building PROMPT at CTIO. When completed in late...
The 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT) is ideally suited to the rapid follow-up of unpredictable a...
We summarise recent deep, rapid GRB follow-up observations using the RoboNet-1.0 network which compr...
The “Pi of the Sky” robotic telescope was designed to monitor a significant fraction of the sky with...
We report on optical observations of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) followed up by our collaboration with t...
We have converted the Palomar 60 inch (1.52 m) telescope from a classic night‐assistant‐operated tel...
We present the first optical observations of a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow using the 2-m robotic...
The Astrophysical Institute Potsdam (AIP) and the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) inaugur...
Robotic telescopes (RTs) are changing the field of observational astronomy. Although, in the past ob...