Fiber Feed for the SDSS Spectrograph
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Telescope Technical Note
19940311
Russell E.
Owen, Walter A. Siegmund, Siriluk Limmongkol and Charles L.
Hull
University of Washington, Astronomy Dept. FM-20
Seattle, WA 98195
Abstract
A 640 fiber feed for a pair of moderate resolution spectrographs
is being constructed for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The
spectrograph slits, optical fibers and plug-plates are mounted
together in removable cartridges. The cartridges protect the optical
fibers and provide quick-change interfaces to the telescope and the
spectrographs. Ten cartridges will be made to allow plugging to occur
during the day.
The fibers are constructed in harnesses of 20. These are
mass-terminated in v-groove blocks at the spectrograph slit. At the
input end the fibers are terminated in simple ferrules and manually
plugged into aluminum plug-plates. The plug-plates are deformed to
match the best focal surface of the telescope, and the holes are
drilled to be parallel to the principal ray after bending. We
describe a simple technique for drilling accurate holes.
Introduction
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) is a project to measure the
red-shift of approximately 106 galaxies and 105 quasars in an area of
pi steradians centered at the north galactic pole. The survey
consists of two parts: digital imaging in five colors to provide data
for object selection and position, and spectroscopy of the chosen
objects. The survey will use a dedicated 2.5m azimuth/altitude
optical telescope with a 3° field of view, located at Apache
Point Observatory in the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico. The SDSS
is a project of the Astrophysical Research Consortium consisting of
the Institute for Advanced Study, Johns Hopkins University, Princeton
University, University of Chicago, New Mexico State University,
University of Washington and Washington State University, and is
currently being funded by the first four of these institutions. Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory and the Japanese Promotion Group are
participating in the SDSS via memoranda of understanding.
Red-shift will be measured using twin fiber-fed spectrographs
which together take 640 simultaneous spectra. The wavelength range is
390 to 910 nm and resolution is 2000. Each spectrograph has a red and
blue camera, each with a 2048x2048 Tektronix CCD. The optical fibers
are positioned in the focal plane using a manually plugged aluminum
plug-plate. The plug-plate is mounted on an instrument rotator at the
Cassegrain focus. The spectrographs are attached to the same rotator,
on either side of the plug-plate, so the fibers flex very little
during exposures.
The two spectrographs are permanently mounted to the back of the
telescope. The plug-plate, fibers and two spectrograph slits are
mounted together as a removable cartridge. We are making 10 such
cartridges, enough for a night's observing. This permits us to plug
the plates during the daytime and simply swap cartridges at night.
All aspects of cartridge handling--changing, transportation and
storage--are being carefully designed for ease of use, speed of
cartridge exchange, and reliability.
Figure 1. The spectrographs and a plug-plate
cartridge.
Fibers
We are using Polymicro FHP 180 µm diameter core optical
fiber. This is an all-silica, UV-enhanced fiber with a hard thin
polyimide buffer layer. Similar fiber has been used for a number of
fiber-fed spectrographs, including Hydra (1),
Argus (2) and Optopus 2 (3).
Our fibers are 2 m long.
The telescope feeds the fibers with an f/5 beam and the
spectrograph accepts f/4. Predicted loss due to focal ratio
degradation for unstressed fibers at these focal ratios is
approximately 3% (4). Dielectric
reflections at the ends claim 7% of the light and approximately 1% is
absorbed in the fiber. We expect to lose another 2% due to
misalignment at the input and output ends, based on our measurements
of light loss versus tilt and our specifications for alignment of the
fibers. Hence the best throughput we can expect is approximately 87%,
but stress in the terminations will likely reduce this.
The project calls for 6400 terminated fibers plus spares. To
simplify termination of the fibers and construction of the fiber
slit, the fibers are being produced in harnesses of 20 (see figure
2). At the output end each fiber harness has a small v-groove
block with the 20 fibers mounted permanently and polished as a unit.
At the input end the fibers are individually terminated in stainless
steel ferrules.
Figure 2. Harness of 20 optical fibers.
Our plan is to have the fiber harnesses made by an outside vendor.
At this moment three vendors are manufacturing prototype harnesses.
We will measure the throughput of these prototypes to determine a
throughput specification for the production contract. The chosen
vendor will measure each fiber of each harness for acceptable
throughput using a test apparatus we provide. We will spot-check the
vendor's measurements using our own identical fiber throughput
tester.
Spectrograph Slits
Each plug-plate cartridge includes two spectrograph fiber slit
assemblies; these are attached with a flexible linkage so that the
two slits and the plug-plate can be independently aligned. After the
plug-plate cartridge is attached to the telescope, an air-activated
lever in each spectrograph presses precision tooling balls on the
slit assembly against kinematic hard points in the spectrograph to
align the slit. The system is automatic and no adjustment is
required.
The slit is 120 mm long, with fibers spaced on 360 µm
centers. The fiber outside diameter is 220 µm, leaving
insufficient room to individually terminate the fibers. We did not
wish to handle bare fibers because they are fragile and difficult to
polish flat and normal to their axis. So we chose to mass terminate
the fibers in v-groove blocks, 20 fibers to a block. The end of each
block is polished flat, and the grooves are fanned slightly--the
proper amount so that (taking into account refraction) light is
emitted normal to the curve of the slit. Each slit will have 16
blocks, or 320 fibers.
The v-groove blocks are attached to a stainless steel sheet called
the slit substrate (see figure
3). Each block is aligned by pressing it against an alignment
jig, a piece of metal accurately machined to the desired curve of the
slit. The jig is removed once all the blocks are mounted. The block
to block spacing is controlled using a calibrated wire as a spacer.
The blocks are attached to the slit substrate using cyanoacrilate. A
small hole in the slit under each block facilitates replacement: a
custom tool clamps down the two neighboring blocks while forcing the
desired block off the slit substrate.
Figure 3. V-groove blocks mounted to the slit
substrate.
Fiber Routing
Behind the v-groove block the fibers are bundled in thin-wall
tubing, 10 fibers to a bundle. Molded RTV grooves route the bundles
along the slit. Once across the flexible linkage and inside the plug
plate cartridge assembly the fibers run bare (unjacketed except for
the polyimide buffer) until they near the plug-plate. At the
plug-plate the fibers are handled during plugging, and the fibers
must be sturdily jacketed for protection. The jacket also provides a
torque which cocks the ferrule, holding it into the plug-plate
against gravity. Our current plan is to use nylon tubing as our
jacketing material. Nylon is stiff, strong and resistant to crushing
and kinking. It is also available in bright colors, which aides
manual plugging.
The transition between bare and jacketed fiber occurs at the
anchor block. This is a heavy piece of metal which positions the
fibers below the plug-plate and absorbs the stresses of plugging. The
jacketing, not the fibers, are attached to the anchor block. Each
fiber is free to move in or out of its jacketing as tension on the
jacket or temperature dictates, and there is generous slack in the
bare fiber beyond the anchor block to accommodate this motion.
Plug-plate
At the input end each fiber is terminated in a stainless steel
ferrule. These ferrules are manually inserted in holes in the
aluminum plug-plate. The plug-plates are 652 mm in diameter (active
area) by 3 mm thick and made of aluminum. They are mounted in a
bending jig to fit them to the curved focal plane. The center of the
plate is translated by only 3 mm, so the bending is purely elastic.
The maximum angle of the principal ray with respect to the normal of
the focal plane is approximately 3°. To maximize throughput the
holes are drilled at the angle of the principal ray. The ferrules
have a tip diameter tolerance of ±5 µm, and the holes will
be drilled with a diameter error of 4 µm RMS (see below). This
permits a very close fit, yielding good alignment of the ferrule and
high throughput.
Each ferrule must last for approximately 300 plugging operations.
We conducted a wear test (5) and
found that our stainless steel ferrules wear less than 2 µm in
diameter in 300 plugging operations into aluminum, which is perfectly
acceptable.
Hole Drilling
Drilling costs for the plug-plates are a significant cost of the
project so it is important to drill the holes as simply as possible.
On the other hand accurate holes are necessary for good throughput.
We conducted a series of tests to determine how accurately we could
drill holes in the plug-plates using various basic techniques
(6). The results are summarized in
table 1. The best holes were
obtained using a spade drill; this yielded holes with a diameter
standard deviation of 3.9 µm. The holes were 2.2 mm in diameter,
drilled in 3 mm thick aluminum plates, and had entry angles ranging
from 0 to 1°. The full diameter bits were made to a tolerance of
+0/-1 µm and held by a collet machined in place in the milling
machine to reduce runout. The undersized bits used before reaming
were of conventional accuracy and held in a conventional collet. All
bits were carbide steel. Our final optical design requires the plates
to be drilled at angles of up to 3°, so we are currently
measuring a new set of test plates drilled at steeper entry angles.
The new tests also evaluate the possibility of starting the hole with
a center drill before drilling.
Table 1. Summary of hole
drilling test results.
Method
|
Position Error
|
Diameter Error
|
Non-Circularity
|
Tilt
|
|
RMS
|
mean
|
std. dev.
|
RMS
|
RMS
|
RMS
|
|
(um)
|
(um)
|
(um)
|
(um)
|
(um)
|
(mrad)
|
Twist Drill
|
7.5
|
1.3
|
5.6
|
5.7
|
10.1
|
3.2
|
Spade Drill
|
9.1
|
5
|
3.9
|
6.3
|
7
|
2
|
End Mill
|
5.6
|
74.7
|
55.9
|
93.2
|
7.8
|
1.6
|
Drill & Ream
|
6.9
|
4.7
|
7.3
|
8.7
|
8.4
|
3
|
Mill & Ream
|
9.7
|
5
|
11.1
|
12.2
|
10.2
|
6.1
|
References
- S. C. Barden, et. al. "Hydra--Kitt
Peak Multi-Object Spectroscopic System", Fiber Optics in
Astronomy II, ASP Conference Series, Vol. 37, ed. Peter Gray,
pp. 185-202, 1993.
- T. E. Ingerson, "Assessing the
Performance of Argus--CTIO's Multiple Object Spectrometer",
Fiber Optics in Astronomy II, ASP Conference Series, Vol.
37, ed. Peter Gray, pp. 76-89, 1993.
- G. Avila and S. D'Odorico, "Fiber
Optics in Astronomical Instruments at ESO", Fiber Optics in
Astronomy II, ASP Conference Series, Vol. 37, ed. Peter Gray,
pp. 90-105, 1993.
- L. W. Ramsey, "Focal Ratio
Degredation in Optical Fibers of Astronomical Interest", Fiber
Optics in Astronomy, ASP Conference Series, Vol. 3, ed. S. C.
Barden, pp. 26-39, 1988.
- R. E. Owen "Wear
of a Stainless Steel Ferrule", SDSS Technical Note
19930517, 1993
- R. E. Owen "Results
of the 3/93 Drilling Tests", SDSS Technical Note
19930430, 1993
A paper similar in content to this note is
published as "Fiber feed for the SDSS spectrograph", R. E. Owen, W.
A. Siegmund, S. Limmongkol and C. L. Hull, Proc. of S.P.I.E., 2198,
1994, p.110.
Date created: 3/11/94
Last modified: 4/16/99
Copyright © 1999, Russell E. Owen
Russell E. Owen
owen@astro.washington.edu