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Optical design for AO relay & coronagraph

This overview provides a summary of the requirements and progress made in the optical design for the AO relay and coronagraph. Key points include efforts to reduce complexity, resolving lingering requirements and fabrication issues, and the need to design with sufficient throughput margin. Additional details on AO relay and coronagraph requirements, design, and issues are also discussed.

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Optical design for AO relay & coronagraph

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  1. Optical design for AO relay & coronagraph

  2. Overview/status • Requirements list • Will be distributed (too long to go into great detail here) • Key points summarized next • AO relay • (likely) workable optical design in-hand • efforts underway to reduce number and complexity of optics • Coronagraph • (likely) workable optical design in-hand • Already at minimum optics count and complexity • To do: • Resolving lingering requirements issues • Fabrication issues • Tolerancing/optomechanics/alignment/operations plan

  3. General requirements • 0.7-0.9 WFS band • 1.0-2.4 aggregate science band (no L-band) • 5 x 5 arcsec field • Throughput/background: very important—we currently have only placeholder values for total throughput and for non-uniformity across the pupil • We need to design with sufficient throughput margin so that we meet performance specs even as coatings degrade or optics collect dust over reasonable intervals • Big impact on mechanical design and operations (could require sealing, over-pressuring, frequent cleaning, or other measures to achieve performance specs); could have big impact on optical design • For reference, Gemini estimates ~0.17-0.35% loss/month for primary due to dust accumulation and up to 0-0.5% loss/month due to coating degradation (various types of protected silver)

  4. AO relay requirements • 2 DM’s conjugate to telescope pupil • ~25 mm pupil, assuming 400 actuator spacing • Placing a DM at an altitude other than ground may be possible—modeling by system designers will be required. Baseline is to have both DM’s conjugate to the telescope pupil • One DM mounted to tip/tilt stage • This may be difficult mechanically (frequency response of t/t stage, t/t stroke (2.5 arcsecs?), DM reliability) • f/16 in, f/64 out • Exit pupil is transmissive with 15 mm diameter in converging f/64 space • Untilted image/pupil planes

  5. AO relay requirements, continued • Common path wfe: < 5-10 nm for spatial frequencies 4-32 /D; ~20nm rms outside this range • Non-common path wfe: < 5 nm for spatial frequencies 4-32 /D; ~20nm rms outside this range

  6. AO relay design • First-order optics requires at least 3 powered relay mirrors; 5 required in order to have collimated light at each DM • Current design has 5 relay mirrors (3 OAP’s, 1 near-sphere, 1 hyperboloid)– designs in progress to use fewer and/or simpler optics • Design Strehl ratio >0.998 at 1.0  (< 7 nm rms, mostly astigmatism) • Untilted image/pupil planes • Dimensions: ~ 1.20 m x 0.80 m

  7. AO relay layout (DM folds, P&C folds removed)

  8. AO relay issues • Optics manufacturability • Alignment/operational procedures

  9. Wavefront sensor • Requirements • f/64 input • 4 x 4 pixels per subaperture • 1.5 arcsec / pixel plate scale • 256 x 256 CCD with 24  pixels (assumed; does not yet exist) • Design characteristics • 5.85 mm collimated beam into lenslet array • Lenslet array: 48  lenslets, f/12.6 – consistent with manufacturing capabilities of Vitrum • 2:1 magnification relay between lenslets and CCD

  10. Coronagraph requirements • Input: f/64 with 15mm diameter transmissive pupil in converging space • Output: f/258, don’t care about pupil position • Occulting spot is reflective • 2nd pupil is required, 15 mm diameter, cold, in collimated space • Beamsplitter before 2nd pupil, in collimated space: reflected path to science, transmitted path to calibration unit • ~20 nm rms wfe, mid-spatial frequencies • Strehl ratio  0.97

  11. Coronagraph design • 3 spherical mirrors (collimator + “telephoto”) • 2nd pupil mask is currently reflective • Output is not telecentric • Not necessary, according to science instruments • Telecentricity would have significantly increased the length or required another optic • Design Strehl ratio >0.998 at 1.0  (< 2 nm rms, mostly coma/astigmatism) • Untilted image plane • Dimensions: ~1.2 m x 0.65 m

  12. Layout of coronagraph

  13. Other solutions considered • Designs using one or two relay optics are possible, but— • Are long (3.75m +) and/or • Do not have collimated space for beamsplitter/cold stop • Reducing pupil mask size would reduce proportionally the distances following the occulting mask

  14. Coronagraph issues • Reflective/transmissive 2nd pupil mask? • Packaging • Cold stop/baffling • Thermal issues

  15. What’s left to be done • Tolerancing • Discussions with optics shops regarding manufacturability of optics with small mid-spatial frequency errors • Packaging & optomechanics • Detailed alignment plan—goes hand in hand with opto-mechanical design

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