2.5-m telescope mirror actuator resolution
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Telescope Technical Note
19970912
Walter
Siegmund and Russell Owen
University of Washington
Contents
Introduction
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) 2.5-m telescope incorporates a
two-mirror optical design that achieves zero distortion in the
imaging mode using two transmitting correcting elements. The two
mirrors are positioned in five axes using electromechanical
actuators. The resolution of these actuators must be chosen so that
the performance goals for the telescope are met.
Telescope operation can be divided into three categories.
- Engineering, e.g., collimation
- Spectroscopy
- Imaging
The resolution of the primary mirror actuators must be fine enough
to collimate the telescope optics. The primary mirror will not be
moved during imaging. The actuator resolution does not affect
astrometry. In spectrographic mode, the primary, along with the
secondary, are moved axially to adjust the scale of the focal surface
to match that of predrilled plug-plates. This occurs between
spectrographic observations. Consequently, primary mirror actuator
resolution does not affect spectroscopy.
During imaging, the secondary must be moved both axially and
laterally to compensate for gravity-induced sag. Consequently, the
resolution of the secondary mirror actuators must be fine enough to
not contribute significant astrometric error. Astrometric
considerations lead to stringent requirements on actuator linearity
as well as resolution. However, we do not discuss this further in
this note.
Primary mirror actuators
Primary axial actuator analysis
It is not anticipated that the primary mirror will be moved during
imaging. Consequently, the specifications of the primary mirror
actuators are not influenced by the goals for astrometric precision.
It is anticipated that the primary and secondary mirrors will be
moved axially to adjust the f/5 image scale during spectrographic
observations to compensate for the thermal expansion of the aluminum
plug-plates. Also, the primary mirror will be translated in 5 axes
during collimation. This is expected to occur regularly, but not
every night. The resolution of the axial actuators for the primary
mirror is set by the criterion that the tilt quantization error not
produce significant decollimation.
The quantization error of the primary actuators can be compensated
by the finer tilt and lateral motions of the secondary actuators.
However, this does not appear to be necessary or desirable and we do
not consider this further.
Table 1:
Parameters for the
primary mirror axial actuators.
Parameter
|
Value
|
Units
|
Notes
|
f/5 scale
|
60.258
|
microns/arc sec
|
1
|
Axial actuator radius
|
0.865
|
m
|
2
|
Lead screw pitch
|
635
|
microns
|
3
|
Number of motor steps
|
200
|
steps/rev
|
4
|
Linear step
|
3.175
|
microns
|
5
|
Tilt step
|
2.447
|
microradians
|
6
|
Maximum tilt quantization error
|
1.06
|
microradians
|
7
|
Degradation rate
|
4.906
|
mas/microradian
|
8
|
Maximum image degradation
|
5.199
|
mas
|
9
|
Degradation allowance for primary tilt
|
30
|
mas
|
10
|
Notes
- Nominal scale for the imaging mode.
- Distance of the axial actuators from the center of the primary
mirror.
- Assumes a 40 thread per inch screw with no reduction.
- Standard stepper motor.
-
- This is the mirror tilt due to one actuator step. The mirror
is assumed to pivot about the other two actuator attachment
points. The distance from one actuator to the line connecting the
other two actuators is 1.5*(Axial actuator radius). This number
gives the shift in telescope pointing due to one step. If this is
less than about 5 microradians, the mirror can be adjusted during
spectrographic observations without interrupting guiding. However,
this is not a requirement.
- The worst tilt quantization error occurs when the tilt is not
in the direction of any of the actuators. It is root(3)/2 larger
than the maximum 1-D error, which is half the tilt step.
- Tolerance
analysis by Steve Kent gives 86 microns for the incremental
FWHM image degradation in the worst direction for 1 arc min of
tilt.
-
- Total for Primary/Secondary alignment/tilt from the February
1996 image degradation budget by Ed Mannery is 100 mas RMS
diameter. Contributors to this collimation error include primary
and secondary tilt and translation and corrector translation
relative to the instrument rotator axis. We allocate 30 mas to
this item that affects the resolution of the primary tilt
adjustment.
Primary transverse actuator analysis
The primary mirror will be translated laterally during
collimation. This is expected to occur regularly, but not every
night. The resolution of the lateral actuators for the primary mirror
is set by the criterion that the lateral motion quantization error
not produce significant decollimation. When the telescope is pointed
at the horizon, one actuator acts vertically and the other two act
sideways on the vertical diameter.
Table 2:
Parameters for the
primary mirror transverse actuators.
Parameter
|
Value
|
Units
|
Notes
|
f/5 scale
|
60.258
|
microns/arc sec
|
1
|
Lead screw pitch
|
635
|
microns
|
2
|
Number of motor steps
|
200
|
steps/rev
|
3
|
Linear step
|
3.175
|
microns
|
4
|
Maximum lateral quantization error
|
2.245
|
microns
|
5
|
Degradation rate
|
1.211
|
mas/micron
|
6
|
RMS image degradation
|
1.468
|
mas
|
7
|
Degradation allowance for primary tilt
|
30
|
mas
|
8
|
Notes
- Nominal scale for the imaging mode.
- Assumes a 40 thread per inch screw with no reduction.
- Standard stepper motor.
- One step causes an 0.58 microradian offset in telescope
pointing, i.e., (Linear Step)/(Final focal length). If this is
less than about 5 microradians, the mirror can be adjusted during
spectrographic observations without interrupting guiding. However,
this is not a requirement.
- Divide by 2 to get the maximum 1D quantization error. Multiply
by root(2) to get quantization error along the diagonal.
- Tolerance
analysis by Steve Kent gives 61 microns for the incremental
FWHM image degradation in the worst direction for 1 mm of lateral
displacement.
-
- Total for Primary/Secondary alignment/tilt from the February
1996 image degradation budget by Ed Mannery is 100 mas RMS
diameter. Contributors to this collimation error include primary
and secondary tilt and translation and corrector translation
relative to the instrument rotator axis. We allocate 30 mas to
this item that affects the resolution of the primary translation
adjustment.
Secondary actuators
Secondary axial actuator analysis
It is expected that the secondary mirror will be moved during
imaging to maintain collimation. Generally, this will be needed to
compensate for telescope flexure. Occasionally, it may be necessary
to compensate for temperature changes, but the small negative thermal
expansion coefficient of the carbon fiber reinforced plastic truss
elements should make this infrequent. Because these motions occur
during imaging, the specifications of the secondary mirror actuators
affect the astrometric precision of the telescope and this sets their
resolution.
The axial sag of the secondary due to gravity is expected to be
less than 200 microns for a 15° zenith angle change at a zenith
angle of 45°. The maximum zenith angle rate during tracking is
15° per hour. The corresponding secondary mirror axial rate is
less than 83 steps/minute.
Table 3:
Parameters for the
secondary mirror axial actuators.
Parameter
|
Value
|
Units
|
Notes
|
Final focal length
|
12.5
|
m
|
1
|
Secondary - focal surface distance
|
4.396
|
m
|
2
|
Axial actuator radius
|
0.32
|
m
|
3
|
Lead screw pitch
|
635
|
microns
|
4
|
Speed reducer ratio
|
80
|
|
5
|
Number of motor steps
|
200
|
steps/rev
|
6
|
Linear step
|
0.04
|
microns
|
7
|
1-D tilt step
|
0.083
|
microrad
|
8
|
RMS 2-D step error
|
0.031
|
microrad
|
9
|
Image motion sensitivity
|
144.902
|
mas/microrad
|
10
|
RMS image motion
|
4.426
|
mas
|
11
|
Tracking error allowance for secondary tilt
|
20
|
mas
|
12
|
Notes
-
- Distance of secondary mirror vertex to the f/5 focal surface.
- Mounting radius of the axial actuators on the secondary
mirror.
- 40 threads per inch.
- Reduction ratio of the harmonic speed reducer.
- Standard stepper motor.
- Linear step size for each actuator (Lead screw pitch)/((Speed
reducer ratio)*(Number of motor steps)).
- This is the mirror tilt due to one actuator step. The mirror
is assumed to pivot about the other two actuator attachment
points. The distance from one actuator to the line connecting the
other two actuators is 1.5*(Axial actuator radius).
- Multiply by 0.37 to convert p-v to RMS. This is from a Monte
Carlo calculation where points were placed randomly on a rectangle
containing 3 equally spaced reference points (representing the
discrete tilts of the secondary mirror. The minimum distance from
the reference points was calculated.
- This is 206*2*(Secondary mirror to focal surface
distance)/(Final focal length). The factor 2 is necessary because
the deviation of the reflected ray is twice the tilt of the optic.
Multiply by (Secondary mirror to focal surface distance) to get
the physical displacement on the focal surface. Divide by the
final focal length to convert to radians on the sky. Multiply by
206 to convert to milliarcseconds.
-
- While it is desirable that this item be about 6 mas, this
number comes from measurements of the 3.5-m secondary mirror
motions and represents the performance that has been achieved. See
item 24 of Table 1 of
2.5-m
Telescope Tracking Error Budget (SDSS Technical Note
19970523). Changes have been made to that design to reduce the
effect of friction between the nut and lead screw.
Secondary transverse actuator analysis
The resolution of the lateral actuators for the secondary mirror
is set by the criterion that the lateral motion quantization error
not produce significant degradation of the astrometric accuracy. The
lateral actuators act at 45° angles to the vertical plane
containing the telescope optical axis. Because of symmetry, the
secondary will sag in this plane. Consequently, both lateral
actuators must act together to compensate for this motion.
About 520 microns of lateral motion will be necessary from 0°
to 60° zenith angle. About 1.8 steps/minute are needed if the
telescope tracks at the sidereal rate in zenith angle. For a zenith
angle change of 10°, the transverse motion of the secondary is
105 microns. Uncompensated, the image degradation is 100 mas if the
telescope is initially collimated.
Table 4:
Parameters for the
secondary mirror transverse actuators.
Parameter
|
Value
|
Units
|
Notes
|
Final focal length
|
12.5
|
m
|
1
|
Secondary focal length
|
3.597
|
m
|
2
|
Secondary - focal surface distance
|
4.396
|
m
|
3
|
Number of actuators
|
2
|
|
4
|
Lead screw pitch
|
635
|
microns
|
5
|
Lever ratio
|
3.1
|
|
6
|
Number of motor steps
|
200
|
steps/rev
|
7
|
Linear step
|
1.024
|
microns
|
8
|
RMS step quantization error
|
0.296
|
microns
|
9
|
Total transverse quantization error
|
0.418
|
microns
|
10
|
Image motion sensitivity
|
20.142
|
mas/micron
|
11
|
RMS image motion
|
8.423
|
mas
|
12
|
Tracking error allowance for secondary displacement
|
5
|
mas
|
13
|
Notes
-
- Distance of secondary mirror vertex to the f/5 focal surface.
- Mounting radius of the axial actuators on the secondary
mirror.
-
- 40 threads per inch.
- Reduction ratio of the harmonic speed reducer.
- Standard stepper motor.
- The step size is the peak-valley quantization error.
- Multiply by root(3)/6 or 0.289 to convert peak-valley to RMS.
- Multiply tilt error of one actuator by root(2) to account for
the two actuators. The angle between the actuators is 90°.
They act along diagonals of the secondary frame so both must be
adjusted to compensate for the flexure of the optics support
structure.
- This is 206*(Secondary mirror - focal surface
distance)/(Secondary mirror - focal length)*(Final focal length).
Multiply by the Secondary mirror - focal surface distance over the
Secondary mirror - focal length to get the physical displacement
on the focal surface. Divide by the final focal length to convert
to radians on the sky. Multiply by 206 to convert to
milliarcseconds. See Figure 2.7 and accompanying text (Daniel J.
Schroeder, Astronomical Optics, Academic Press, San
Diego, 1987, p. 16) for the geometry and relationships.
- Item 10 times item 11.
- See item 24 of Table 1 of
2.5-m
Telescope Tracking Error Budget (SDSS Technical Note
19970523).
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank Ed Mannery for the image degradation error budget
and Steve Kent for the optics alignment tolerance analysis.
Date created: 9/12/97
Last modified: 11/13/97
Copyright © 1997 Walter A. Siegmund
Walter A. Siegmund
siegmund@astro.washington.edu