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Processing GOTO data with the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines II: forced photometry and light curves

Authors :
Puji Irawati
Kendall Ackley
R. L. C. Starling
R. Cutter
Rene P. Breton
Utane Sawangwit
Seppo Mattila
E. Rol
Enric Palle
D. L. Pollacco
James Mullaney
Mark Kennedy
P. T. O'Brien
P. A. Strøm
K. Wiersema
J. McCormac
S. P. Littlefair
V. S. Dhillon
Justyn R. Maund
L. K. Nuttall
L. Makrygianni
Martin J. Dyer
G. Ramsay
U. Burhanudin
S. Aukkaravittayapun
K. Ulaczyk
David Mkrtichian
D. Mata-Sanchez
Supachai Awiphan
S. Tooke
T. Killestein
J. D. Lyman
Eric Thrane
Rubina Kotak
Paul Chote
E. J. Daw
Christopher J. Duffy
Duncan K. Galloway
T. Heikkilä
B. P. Gompertz
R. Eyles-Ferris
T. R. Marsh
D. Steeghs
Saran Poshyachinda
Y. L. Mong
A. J. Levan
A. Chrimes
Elizabeth R. Stanway
Source :
arXiv

Abstract

We have adapted the Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) Science Pipelines to process data from the Gravitational-Wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO) prototype. In this paper, we describe how we used the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines to conduct forced photometry measurements on nightly GOTO data. By comparing the photometry measurements of sources taken on multiple nights, we find that the precision of our photometry is typically better than 20~mmag for sources brighter than 16 mag. We also compare our photometry measurements against colour-corrected PanSTARRS photometry, and find that the two agree to within 10~mmag (1$\sigma$) for bright (i.e., $\sim14^{\rm th}$~mag) sources to 200~mmag for faint (i.e., $\sim18^{\rm th}$~mag) sources. Additionally, we compare our results to those obtained by GOTO's own in-house pipeline, {\sc gotophoto}, and obtain similar results. Based on repeatability measurements, we measure a $5\sigma$ L-band survey depth of between 19 and 20 magnitudes, depending on observing conditions. We assess, using repeated observations of non-varying standard SDSS stars, the accuracy of our uncertainties, which we find are typically overestimated by roughly a factor of two for bright sources (i.e., $17^{\rm th}$~mag). Finally, we present lightcurves for a selection of variable sources, and compare them to those obtained with the Zwicky Transient Factory and GAIA. Despite the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines still undergoing active development, our results show that they are already delivering robust forced photometry measurements from GOTO data.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in PASA

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
arXiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5a03a19b9921a48d4acfaa7543a4be54