Paper
9 August 2010 Primary mirror dynamic disturbance models for TMT: vibration and wind
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Abstract
The principal dynamic disturbances acting on a telescope segmented primary mirror are unsteady wind pressure (turbulence) and narrowband vibration from rotating equipment. Understanding these disturbances is essential for the design of the segment support assembly (SSA), segment actuators, and primary mirror control system (M1CS). The wind disturbance is relatively low frequency, and is partially compensated by M1CS; the response depends on the control bandwidth and the quasi-static stiffness of the actuator and SSA. Equipment vibration is at frequencies higher than the M1CS bandwidth; the response depends on segment damping, and the proximity of segment support resonances to dominant vibration tones. We present here both disturbance models and parametric response. Wind modeling is informed by CFD and based on propagation of a von Karman pressure screen. The vibration model is informed by analysis of accelerometer and adaptive optics data from Keck. This information is extrapolated to TMT and applied to the telescope structural model to understand the response dependence on actuator design parameters in particular. Whether the vibration response or the wind response is larger depends on these design choices; "soft" (e.g. voice-coil) actuators provide better vibration reduction but require high servo bandwidth for wind rejection, while "hard" (e.g. piezo-electric) actuators provide good wind rejection but require damping to avoid excessive vibration transmission to the primary mirror segments. The results for both nominal and worst-case disturbances and design parameters are incorporated into the TMT actuator performance assessment.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Douglas G. MacMynowski, M. Mark Colavita, Warren Skidmore, and Konstantinos Vogiatzis "Primary mirror dynamic disturbance models for TMT: vibration and wind", Proc. SPIE 7738, Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management for Astronomy IV, 77380E (9 August 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.857395
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Actuators

Mirrors

Turbulence

Servomechanisms

Adaptive optics

Telescopes

Data modeling

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