Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2012
Astronomical transients are intrinsically interesting objects to study. However, fast optical transients (μs time-scales) are a largely unexplored field of optical astronomy. Most optical observations use instruments that have integration times of the order of seconds and are thus unable to resolve fast transients. Current-generation atmospheric Cherenkov gamma-ray telescopes such as Veritas, which consists of four 12-m telescopes, have huge collecting areas, much larger than those of any existing optical telescopes. This paper outlines the benefits of using a Cherenkov telescope to detect optical transients, and the implementation of the Veritas Transient Detector (TRenDy), a dedicated multi-channel photometer based on field-programmable gate arrays which can be used on Veritas for such studies without interfering with gamma-ray observations.