Paper
5 November 2001 Cryogenic (70-K) measurement of an all-composite 2-m-diameter mirror
Brian E. Catanzaro, Steven J. Connell, Mark Mimovich, Stan Backovsky, Grant Williams, James A. Thomas, Daniel D. Barber, Roger A. Johnston, Joseph C. Hylton, Kelly J. Dodson, Eri J. Cohen
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Herschel Space Observatory (formerly known as FIRST) consists of a 3.5 m space telescope. As part of a JPL- funded effort to develop lightweight telescope technology suitable for this mission, COI designed and fabricated a spherical, F/1, 2 m aperture prototype primary mirror using solely carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) materials. To assess the performance of this technology, optical metrology of the mirror surface was performed from ambient to an intended operational temperature for IR-telescopes of 70K. Testing was performed horizontally in a cryogenic vacuum chamber at Arnold Engineering Development Center (AEDC), Tennessee. The test incorporated a custom thermal shroud, a characterization and monitoring of the dynamic environment, and a stress free mirror mount. An IR-wavelength phase shifting interferometer (IR PSI) was the primary instrument used to measure the mirror surface. From an initial surface figure of 2.1 microns RMS at ambient, a modest 3.9 microns of additional RMS surface error was induced at 70K. The thermally induced error was dominated by low-order deformations, of the type that could easily be corrected with secondary or tertiary optics. In addition to exceptional thermal stability, the mirror exhibited no significant change in the figure upon returning to room temperature.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Brian E. Catanzaro, Steven J. Connell, Mark Mimovich, Stan Backovsky, Grant Williams, James A. Thomas, Daniel D. Barber, Roger A. Johnston, Joseph C. Hylton, Kelly J. Dodson, and Eri J. Cohen "Cryogenic (70-K) measurement of an all-composite 2-m-diameter mirror", Proc. SPIE 4444, Optomechanical Design and Engineering 2001, (5 November 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.447305
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Cryogenics

Interferometers

Space telescopes

Telescopes

Phase modulation

Space observatories

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