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Download No Slide Title - The University of Arizona College of Optical Sciences
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Optical Design of Giant Telescopes for Space Jim Burge, Erin Sabatke Optical Sciences Center Roger Angel, Neville Woolf Steward Observatory University of Arizona The need for large telescopes • Push back the frontier for astrophysics – We want to study what we can barely detect – We know that increased technology will detect new things • Imaging planets around other stars – Requires blocking or nulling the star light • Laser projectors for interstellar vehicles – Use light momentum to push the sail for interstellar travel • Earth observations from geosynchronous Telescopes in space Hubble Space Telescope 1990 Hubble’s telescope Mt. Wilson 100-in 1917 Natural evolution to large telescopes • Make the primary larger – keep it in the shade – make the f/number faster to limit length – effective optical surface using smaller segments that can be launched and deployed – maintain weight while increasing area – Requires primary mirror with density ~15 kg/m2 Next Generation Space Telescope 2009 8-m aperture Optical design issues for NGST • Three mirror anastigmat, 10 arc min FOV • Fine steering mirror at a pupil – image stabilization limited by field rotation, distortion • Fast primary is highly aspheric and difficult to fabricate and test 8-m primary mirror Tertiary mirror Secondary mirror Science Instruments Fine Steering Mirror Multiple Aperture Systems Collecting telescope Combining mirrors Combining telescope Coherent image Coherent image Interferometer that combines two telescopes Collecting mirror Interferometer that directly combines light from two reflectors. • Increase baseline and collecting area by combining multiple apertures • 100-m array • Use nulling (destructive interference) to cancel star light • Detect planets and obtain low resolution spectra, looking for familiar atmospheric constituents • Special Purpose Very small field of view optimized for exoplanets • Solar orbit, benign thermal and gravity environment Intensity Terrestrial Planet Finder 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Wavelength (µm) TPF as free flying array of 3.5-m telescopes What about giant telescopes • Size is limited by mass from mirror technology • NGST mirror technology could get to 5 kg/m2 50 cm diameter mirror under construction 1 mm thick glass 7 gram actuators 1 kg/m2 composite support • For economical launch with existing technology, need mass << 1 kg/m2 Ultralight mirrors for space optics • Lower mass mirrors require thinner substrates (<< 1 mm) • The difficulty is support and control • Curved optics intrinsically require shape control • Flat optics can be made by simply stretching a thin membrane Error in reflective surface = half of thickness variation Control for flat membrane mirrors • Start with thin, reflective membrane of uniform thickness • Hold it in tension from a plane at the perimeter Membrane with reflective coating Tension control Rigid frame Shape control with actuators at nodes • Define the perimeter with multiple points, each one under active control. • Reduces shape control to 1 dimension - perimeter Membrane mirror technology • Numerous developments underway at University of Arizona (Stamper et al. In Imaging Technology and Telescopes, presented Sunday). What good are flats? • Collect light using diffraction – from Rod Hyde, Livermore – limited bandwidth, contrast • Or use an array of flats to approximate a paraboloidal reflector – like solar collectors – downstream optics compensate for non-curvature Primary made from flat segments Optical design issues for primary made from flats • On axis - easy – make different segments come to focus at the same place with the same path length • For field of view - tricky. For each subaperture system, must also – meet sine condition (constant mapping of entrance pupil to exit pupil) – match image scale and distortion – match field curvatures • The general solution is to make the effective focal ratio of the primary as long as possible Telescope with free flying elements 1 km S u n s h ie ld S u n s h ie ld 1 0 m c o m b in in g te le s c o p e 5 0 m p rim a ry Faster telescopes for “conventional” rigid systems Slower designs for telescope with free flying elements Transition to Membranes The length comes at the price of system agility Telescope diameter surface density F/1 systems 2.6m 8.0m 150Kg/m2 16Kg/m2 Mass 800Kg Moment of Inertia 1 unit Rotation period for same thruster expended 1 Rotation period for same reaction wheel use 1 800Kg 10 14m 5Kg/m2 F/20 systems 25m 100m 1.6Kg/m2 800Kg 30 800Kg 36,000 3 5 10 30 0.1Kg/m2 800Kg 600,000 190 800 36,000 600,000 Membrane telescopes are for long observations of ultra-faint objects only. General Purpose telescopes should be restricted to rigid mirrors. Truss for large primary mirror (Tom Connors, Steward Observatory) Optical design and analysis • Simulations using Optima (from Lockheed Martin) • Test case with several flat mirrors Analysis of flat mirror telescope On axis OPD PSF 1 arc minute Pupil mapping and phase errors Mapping distortion of entrance pupil (h) to exit pupil (h’) couples with wavefront tilt to cause phase errors Distorted Ideal mapping Entrance Entrance mapping pupil pupil h Exit pupil with non-linear mapping Exit pupil No distortion h’ From Object a‘ a To image ’ Wavefront is preserved Wavefront Phase from WF ‘tilt’ Phase error in wavefront Definition of “sine condition” Entrance pupil Exit pupil To Image From Object Sin(U) Sin(U’) Spherical entrance pupil, coordinates of sin(U) Spherical exit pupil, coordinates of sin(U’) Sine condition requires linear mapping of sin(U) -> sin(U’) Sine condition violation • Geometric pupil distortion causes violation of sine condition, which varies with field • This causes images to dephase for < 1 arcmin FOV Quantifying sine condition violation 1.6 Sine condition violation: % deviation from on-axis value of sine condition 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 Field angle (arcminutes) 2.5 3 3.5 Optical design summary The design with flat segments works! However, the field of view is limited by the apertures dephasing with field, from the sine condition violation Preliminary results indicate that a 100-m telescope of this type could be made with 6 meter segments 2 km length 7 m secondary (spherical relay) 10 meter corrector (60 cm elements) 0.3 µm rms wavefront errors for 20 arcsec FOV (40 nm rms for 6 arc seconds) Curving the primary The system works much better if the primary can be curved Electrostatics can be used to do this A two-mirror 100-m telescope can achieve 5 arc minute FOV at f/20 with 2 km length 10 m concave secondary 0.4 µm rms wavefront error The 6 m primary segments have 4 mm sag This has 40 nm rms wavefront error at 1.6 arc minute FOV Stretched Membrane with Electrostatic Curvature • Primary mirrors with membrane reflectors can be made from slightly curved segments (using electrostatics) The moon imaged at Steward Observatory with the first telescope to use a primary mirror of Stretched Membrane with Electrostatic Curvature (SMEC). The silicon nitride membrane was 0.7 um thick and curved to a 3 m focal length by a field of 2 MV/m What about a strip mirror Simulated performance 100m x 2m HST Slot, 1 exposure NGST Slot 18 exposures (Keith Hege, Steward Observatory) Truss modeled for strip mirror (Tom Connors, Steward Observatory) Summary There is no evolutionary path from today’s systems to giant telescopes in space. Launch constraints require low mass, leading to optics made from membranes. Orbital mechanics allows the use of free flying elements and sunshields. Primary mirrors, made from arrays of flat mirrors can provide corrected images. With added weight and complexity, the membranes can be moderately curved, gaining an order of magnitude in field of view.