1 / 19

Active Alignment System for the LSST

Active Alignment System for the LSST . Introduction. Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) Optical Design/Layout Operational Requirements Active Alignment System System Definition Alignment Requirements Design Methodologies Spatial Analyzer (SA) Effort SA Model Description

betty_james
Download Presentation

Active Alignment System for the LSST

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Active Alignment System for the LSST

  2. Introduction • Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) • Optical Design/Layout • Operational Requirements • Active Alignment System • System Definition • Alignment Requirements • Design Methodologies • Spatial Analyzer (SA) Effort • SA Model Description • Technologies Reviewed • Performance Analysis

  3. M2 Camera • M1/M3 LSST Optical System • Modified Paul-Baker Design • f/1.23 • 3.5 Degree FOV • 3-Mirror Telescope • Unique 8.4m M1/M3 • 3.4m M2 • Camera • 3 Refractive Lenses, 6 Filter Bands • 63cm Detector • 3 Billion Pixels/Image! • 15 Tbytes/night, 5 Pbytes/yr

  4. 0.2 degrees 10 m 8.3 m LSST Product of areas measures survey capability Etendue = 319 m2deg2 LSST Comparison Field of view (full moon is 0.5 degrees) Primary mirror diameter 3.5 degrees Keck Telescope

  5. Optics Subsystem Layout • 3 Major Optical Subsystems • M1/M3 Provides Reference Optical Axis • M1/M3 & M2 Active Figure Control • M2 & Camera Hexapods for Rigid Body • Telescope Survey Operational Cadence • Open Shutter  15sec Exposure • Close Shutter  2sec Readout • Repeat Sequence for 2nd Exposure • 5sec Slew to Next Field • Maintain Alignment During Operation

  6. Telescope Control System (TCS) • TCS Delivers Best Possible Image to Camera • Multiple Inputs • Operator • Enclosure • Mount • Sky Camera • Weather Station • Wavefront Sensing System • Active Alignment System

  7. Camera Wavefront Sensing • Wavefront Sensors w/in Camera Focal Plane • Baseline Curvature Sensors • Provides Mirror Figure Control & Rigid Body Positioning • No Information While Shutter Closed Wavefront Sensors (4 locations) Guider Sensors (8 locations) Potential Aux. Sensors (16 locations) 3.5 degree Field of View (63 cm diameter) Sensor Package (9 per Raft) Raft (21 in FPA)

  8. Active Alignment System Description • Complementary to Focal Plane Wavefront Sensing • Supports Telescope Alignment • Initial Site Installation/Mount Model Development • Re-Assembly after Repair, Recoating, etc. • Perform Start of Night Operational Setup • Maintain Alignment of 3 Major Subsystems • M1/M3 Reference • M2 Position (5 DOF) Camera Position (5 DOF) Hexapods

  9. Active Alignment System Requirements • Define Subsystem Fiducials • Fiducials Define Optical Axis • Locate on Telescope Mount, M1/M3, M2, & Camera • Incorporate into Final Factory Acceptance Testing • Measure Fiducials to Maintain Subsystem Alignment LSST Alignment Requirements

  10. System Design Constraints • Packaging/Line of Sight Issues • No Interference w/ Light Rays • See Fiducials for Measurements • Operational Needs • Ease of Service / Calibration • No Heat/Vibration • Support Full Telescope Pointing (Zenith to Horizon) • Operational Temperature Range -10C to +25C • Minimal Warm-up Time Allowed • High Altitude/Low Pressure • Sufficient Measurement Speed – 30 Second Cadence • Incorporate into TCS for Closed-Loop Feedback • Provide Required Accuracies

  11. Light Sources • Measurement Light Sources Must Minimize Camera Science CCD Impact • l>1mm Preferred (also ~400nm & ~950nm) • Pointing system technology (wavelength) • Ranging system technology (wavelength) Camera Focal Plane Transmission (Ideal Filters, Optics, Atmos, QE)

  12. System Development Approach • Study Effort w/ NRK to Define Active Alignment System using SA Modeling • Baseline Definition & Performance Prediction • Establish Handoff to Wavefront Sensing System • Uncertainty Analysis for Metrology Controlled Optical Alignment System • Review Various Technologies • Laser Tracker • Laser Radar • Videogrammetry

  13. Measurement Network Simulation

  14. Uncertainty Field Analysis • Metrology Network Optimized (Range Weighted Optimization)  Composite Points • Uncertainty Fields Established for Each Composite Measured Target • Uncertainty Estimate for Telescope Mirror/Camera Computed with Sets of Target Uncertainty Clouds in Over-Determined Circle, Planar, and Cylindrical Shape (Monte-Carlo) • Centering • Normal Direction Pointing • Focus Position

  15. Metrology System Uncertainty Analysis

  16. Tilt Uncertainty Analysis vs. Num of Pts

  17. Uncertainty Analysis Conclusions • LSST SA Model Results • 3 Metrology Systems Analyzed: (Laser Tracker, Laser Radar, & Videogrammetry) • Each System Capable of Meeting Requirements for Relative Subsystem Position/Orientation • No Perfect Solution (Source l Issues, Total Measurement Time, etc.)

  18. Planned Future Activity • Continued System Development • Define Fiducial Geometries for Major Telescope Subsystems • Engage Metrology Device Vendors • Review Requirements • Explain Current Deficiencies & Needs • Perform Measurements at Nearby AZ Telescope Sites (Similar Operating Conditions) w/ Existing Commercial Hardware

  19. What the sky will look like with LSST • Survey image shown is ~0.5 degree field from Deep Lens Survey Project • Shows roughly ten times as many galaxies per unit area (vs. Sloan Digital Sky Survey) • The LSST images will cover 50,000 times this area in 6 different optical bands (20,000 sq. degrees!) • LSST will show changes in the sky by repeatedly covering this area - multiple times per month • 250,000 Type 1a supernovae detected each year QUESTIONS/COMMENTS

More Related