Paper
28 August 1998 Issues to be addressed in the design and fabrication of ultralightweight meter-class optics
Gary C. Krumweide
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
There is a growing need for large aperture, ultralightweight, deployable optics for various science, military and commercial compact satellites. This paper will examine the engineering and manufacturing considerations that must be addressed in order to satisfy the requirements for these sought after optics. In order to limit the scope of this paper, only Graphite Fiber Reinforced/Polymer Matrix Composites (GFR/PMC) will be under consideration because of the potential to satisfy ultralightweight mirror requirements. The requirements associated with specular mirror concepts that Composite Optics, Incorporated (COI) has proposed to Air Force Research Laboratory and NASA Langley Research Center for visible range optics and LIDAR optics, respectively, will also be our interest. Moreover, it is the intent of this paper to illustrate how COI's proposed design/manufacturing concepts for visible and LIDAR optics have evolved based on overcoming, or working around, material constraints and/or undesirable characteristics associated with GFR/PMC.
© (1998) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gary C. Krumweide "Issues to be addressed in the design and fabrication of ultralightweight meter-class optics", Proc. SPIE 3356, Space Telescopes and Instruments V, (28 August 1998); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.324460
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Glasses

LIDAR

Composites

Optics manufacturing

Space mirrors

Distortion

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