You have requested a machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Neither SPIE nor the owners and publishers of the content make, and they explicitly disclaim, any express or implied representations or warranties of any kind, including, without limitation, representations and warranties as to the functionality of the translation feature or the accuracy or completeness of the translations.
Translations are not retained in our system. Your use of this feature and the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in the Terms and Conditions of Use of the SPIE website.
5 August 2010Robustness of Thirty Meter Telescope primary mirror control
The primary mirror control system for the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) maintains the alignment of the 492
segments in the presence of both quasi-static (gravity and thermal) and dynamic disturbances due to unsteady
wind loads. The latter results in a desired control bandwidth of 1Hz at high spatial frequencies. The achievable
bandwidth is limited by robustness to (i) uncertain telescope structural dynamics (control-structure interaction)
and (ii) small perturbations in the ill-conditioned influence matrix that relates segment edge sensor response
to actuator commands. Both of these effects are considered herein using models of TMT. The former is explored
through multivariable sensitivity analysis on a reduced-order Zernike-basis representation of the structural
dynamics. The interaction matrix ("A-matrix") uncertainty has been analyzed theoretically elsewhere, and is
examined here for realistic amplitude perturbations due to segment and sensor installation errors, and gravity
and thermal induced segment motion. The primary influence of A-matrix uncertainty is on the control of "focusmode";
this is the least observable mode, measurable only through the edge-sensor (gap-dependent) sensitivity
to the dihedral angle between segments. Accurately estimating focus-mode will require updating the A-matrix
as a function of the measured gap. A-matrix uncertainty also results in a higher gain-margin requirement for
focus-mode, and hence the A-matrix and CSI robustness need to be understood simultaneously. Based on the
robustness analysis, the desired 1 Hz bandwidth is achievable in the presence of uncertainty for all except the
lowest spatial-frequency response patterns of the primary mirror.
The alert did not successfully save. Please try again later.
Douglas G. MacMynowski, Peter M. Thompson, Chris Shelton, Lewis C. Roberts Jr., "Robustness of Thirty Meter Telescope primary mirror control," Proc. SPIE 7733, Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes III, 77332J (5 August 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.857380