ULTRACAM operations

Lead Research Organisation: University of Sheffield
Department Name: Physics and Astronomy

Abstract

ULTRACAM is a digital camera capable of taking (and storing) up to 500 red, green and blue images per second. The instrument was built in just under 3 years by a consortium from the Universities of Sheffield, Warwick and the UK Astronomy Technology Centre in Edinburgh, using a £300,000 grant awarded by PPARC. ULTRACAM saw 'first light' on 16 May 2002 on the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope (WHT) on La Palma, and first light on the 8.2-m Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile on 4 May 2005. To date, ULTRACAM has been awarded a total of 92 nights of time on these telescopes for projects as varied as white dwarfs, brown dwarfs, asteroseismology, pulsars, black-hole/neutron-star X-ray binaries, eclipsing binary stars, gamma-ray bursts, cataclysmic variables, extrasolar planets, active galactic nuclei, Kuiper Belt objects and Saturn's moon Titan. This grant proposal requests funding for the proper maintenance and operation of ULTRACAM, as well as a modest programme of minor upgrades, thereby ensuring that ULTRACAM maintains its position as the world's premier instrument for high-speed optical astrophysics. As well as maximising the return on PPARC's original investment, this money will also allow us to continue to offer ULTRACAM to others in the UK and astronomical community who wish to use it.

Publications

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Pala A (2019) Evidence for mass accretion driven by spiral shocks onto the white dwarf in SDSS J123813.73-033933.0 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

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Dhillon V (2009) Optical pulsations from the anomalous X-ray pulsar 1E 1048.1-5937 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters

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Littlefair S (2008) Optical variability of the ultracool dwarf TVLM 513-46546: evidence for inhomogeneous dust clouds ? in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters

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Gandhi P (2008) Rapid optical and X-ray timing observations of GX 339-4: flux correlations at the onset of a low/hard state ? in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters

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Van Den Besselaar E (2007) DE CVn: A Bright, Eclipsing Red Dwarf - White Dwarf Binary in Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union

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Littlefair S (2006) A Brown Dwarf Mass Donor in an Accreting Binary in Science

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Wang L (2019) The Pre-He White Dwarf in the Post-mass Transfer Binary EL CVn in The Astronomical Journal