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Some large-telescope design parameter considerations: Distributed pupil telescopes J.R.Kuhn Institute for Astronomy, UH. How to “distribute the glass” in a general-purpose telescope Diffractive performance Mechanical and other issues: The NG-CFHT/ HDRT Concept. Larger telescopes.
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Some large-telescope design parameter considerations: Distributed pupil telescopes J.R.Kuhn Institute for Astronomy, UH • How to “distribute the glass” in a general-purpose telescope • Diffractive performance • Mechanical and other issues: The NG-CFHT/ HDRT Concept
How Sparse? General Concerns • Consider SNR of an image in the spatial frequency domain. a is “sparseness” -- fraction of filled aperture area. • “interferometers”: small a • “telescopes”: a approaches 1 • Image signal scales as MTF. (general telescope imaging argues against using “special” symmetries to solve the imaging problem with a sparse telescope)
MTF Area, A overlap integral scales like axa MTF scales like overlap area (normalized to total area) area, a Sparse aperture a = a/A x x MTF MTF a In general, normalized MTF of sparse array is smaller by factor of a: Image S/N at mid-frequencies is lower by factor of a than filled array {See Fienup, SPIE, 4091, 43 (2000)}
Pupil geometry • Sparse aperture suffers s/n degradation by factor of a • Use a pupil geometry that maximizes core image “Strehl”
Making bigger mirrors (arrays) Aper{ } = Aper { } * Aper{ } PSF{ } = PSF { } X PSF{ } (“Structure Function”) O S P
PSF’s from a finite periodic array 6 ring SMT structure function 10 ring SMT structure function Full PSF with 0.1% gaps (dark bands show subarray diffraction zeros) Full PSF with 10% gaps (dark bands show subarray diffraction zeros)
Keck PSFs Extrafocal LRIS image difference H band AO image, 2 decades, 2.2” FOV (Circular avg. removed) [Courtesy M. Liu] [Courtesy S.Acton, M. Northcott]
Mirrors are imperfect: gaps and edge errors 15 ring hexagonal mirrors with 10% gaps 15 ring hexagonal mirrors without gaps First ring of zeros in hex “Airy” function is circular
Imperfect PSFs, Edge errors No edge errs 0.1 wave errs Edge error PSF 4 decades, 14.9” 5cm random turned up/down 0.1 wave rms figure error on edge regions
Pupil geometries Square off-axis telescope (SOT) 4x8m Segmented mirror telescope (SMT) 72x1m Hexagonal off-axis telescope (HOT) 6x6.5m Monolithic mirror telescope (MMT) 17.4m 22m
Circular or Hexagonal Subapertures 15 ring circular mirrors in hexagonal pattern. 4% gaps Two ring circular mirrors in hexagonal pattern, a=1.04D
PSF comparisons X-cut Y-cut Circular average
Hexagonal close-packed • Perfect mirrors (no edge errors) hexagonal circular mirrors have a PSF which is marginally different from hexagonal mirrors • Perfect large or small mirrors show marginal PSF differences for small (<1% gaps)
Large vs. Small Mirrors • Edge to area ratio increases with number of mirror segments, N, at fixed total area • Expect mirror Strehl to decrease linearly with N if mirror edge wavefront errors are important (and this is unlikely to be corrected with the AO system) • Mechanical complexity cost: expect required MTBF of mirror actuators to increase linearly with N
Atmospheric Performance • Fried parameter: 1m at 1m, outer scale 22m 400 d.f. AO 1.1”
AO - Dynamic Range Large phase errors between subapertures: rotational shearing interferometer (Roddier 1991)
High Dynamic Range TelescopeNG-CFHT Concept • Minimal sparse, a>0.5, maximize PSF core energy, hexagonal circular subapertures • Maximize area/edge ratio • Minimize “complexity” costs for mirror support • With ay0.5 versatile optical mechanical bench support structure is possible • primary defines pupil without obstruction • wide and narrow-field modes natural • secondary optics can be small (e.g. M2 diameter 20cm) • Adaptive optics technology is believable
HDRT • A flexible, general purpose, 22+ m telescope • Diffraction limited over > 10”x10” • Seeing limited over > 1x1 (3x3) deg • The optical bench concept is a modular use of technology available now • A qualitative advance in wide- and narrow-field studies (requiring spatial and photometric dynamic range)