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![]() Computer interaction with telescopes is expanding to include machine learning techniques. It is difficult to guess where this will lead, but the incorporation of machine learning is making things very interesting. A recent journal is dedicated to the topic of robotic telescopes: Astronomische Nachrichten 325:6-8 (2004). Special Issue: Third Potsdam Think Shop on Robotic Astronomy. Definitions used in this publication: Automatic telescopes have a 'goto' system capable of automatic acquisition of targets, examples include amateur Schmidt Cassegrains, which require a person to confirm alignment and perform other tasks. Automated telescopes include a computer capable of executing a night's observing program or observations of a list of objects. These require an operator to start at dusk, stop at dawn, and correct for errors or incoming clouds. The instrument must find & acquire the target, confirm it is the correct target (in a crowded field), focus, and make the observation or measurement .... repeatedly. Remote telescopes are automated telescopes operated from a distant location, and the systems include weather detection instruments & web cams to determine observing conditions. Robotic telescopes are unmanned, they allow an operator to initiate an observing program, and the telescope will complete it. Also described as 'autonomous'. There are levels of robotic autonomy. Generally the operator is active at the beginning of a night, but less frequent initiation is possible. Recovery from system errors might require human intervention. Automatic scheduling involves selection of targets, based on optimization determined by the operator's program; and multiple observing programs utilizing a single telescope involve prioritizing & equitably distributing observing time. Adaptive optics are automatic by nature, but system calibration is critical & complex; the immediate use on robotic telescopes is to shorten integration time on stellar sources. Utility: Classification of objects as they are observed. Spectroscopy; automated spectral analysis seems to be a big field now. Photometry. Locations in Antarctica are claimed to have the best seeing on earth; these & other inhospitable sites are opened up by robotic telescopes. Robotic telescopes are being developed using machine learning technology. (One definition of 'machine learning': Computer systems acquire knowledge from previous performance & results, and improve their performance over time. Raw data are externally supplied; training examples are supplied by a previous stage of the process. Uses pattern recognition software.) These telescopes could recognize celestial transients (survey operations); slew to fast transients such as Gamma ray bursts; and monitor variations in persistent sources (recognizing changes as they happen). 'Time domain astronomy' is a broad classification that organizes events by their temporal characteristics. Nearly all transients faster than a few minutes in length are terrestrial, thus target selection is a challenge. Also: Networks of autonomous robotic telescopes; possibly using diverse instruments. Are there papers about the future development of telescopes combined with machine learning? -- ============================================= Peter Abrahams telscope.at.europa.dot.com The history of the telescope and the binocular: http://home.europa.com/~telscope/binotele.htm |
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