User:Ohms Law Bot/Cleanup/TAOS: The Taiwanese-American Occultation Survey

TAOS: The Taiwanese-American Occultation Survey is a robotic survey of the Outer Solar System. TAOS uses an array of 4 50-cm aperture telescopes to monitor background stars awaiting the alignment of an Outer Solar System with a star target: an occultation. Small objects in the Outer Solar System that are too small to be observed by direct observations at this time can be probed with this technique. Occultation surveys take advantage of diffraction effects during the transit of the occulting object (the occulter) in front of a background star to constraint the size and distance of the occulter. TAOS is sensitive to occultations by Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs) larger than about 500m in diameter and to Sedna-like objects.
 * TAOS: The Taiwanese-American Occultation Survey

The TAOS telescopes are located in Taiwan, at the Lulin_Observatory in Yushan national park.

TAOS is a joint effort of Academia Sinica, Institute of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, The Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, National Central University, Institute of Astronomy and Yonsei University, South Korea