Tilt and Sag Coefficients for the 3.5-m Secondary Mirror: 14
April, 2000
On April 14, 2000 UT a series of Shack-Hartmann measurements were
made at varying altitudes. Sixty second exposures of SAO stars
between 7 and 8 magnitude were used for most of these measurements.
Owing to the brightness of the twilight sky, the last couple of
measurements were taken with 5th magnitude stars and used exposure
times of only 10 seconds. Five Shack-Hartmann exposures were taken at
each telescope altitude. These measurements were averaged to produce
the results shown in this report. The tilts and sags shown are those
given by the normal Shack-Hartmann analysis. All of these
measurements were made with the collimation routine ON. The telescope
focus was set before the first series of measurements and kept fixed
throughout the rest of the exposures.
These measurements were taken immediately after the new Heidenhain
encoders were placed on the secondary. These new encoders are
positioned radially inward from the secondary actuators by
approximately 1.75". The intent is to eventually use these encoders
to make automatic corrections to the mirror position. However, as an
initial precaution, during these measurements the control loop that
accomplishes these feedback corrections was left off (MAXCORR was set
to 0 for all three actuators). Without this feedback, off-telescope
tests showed positioning errors on the order of 10 arcseconds in the
secondary mirror position. Errors of this magnitude are clearly
evident in the data presented here. Turning MAXCORR on may have a
considerable beneficial effect for future measurements of this
nature.
For future efforts along these same lines, it is important to note
the correspondence between the tilt conventions used by the
Shack-Hartmann software and those used by the TCC. The critical
comparisons are given by the examples in Table 1. The correspondence
between the defocus diagnostics given by the Shack-Hartmann software
and that used by the TCC is trivial given the fact that positive TCC
focus motions move the secondary towards the primary.
Table 1: Comparison of Shack-Harmann Diagnostic
Tilts with TCC Motions
Shack-Hartmann Diagnostic Tilt
|
Corresponding TCC Tilt Required to Correct
Collimation
|
Tilt M2 Bk by X"
|
change x-tilt by +X"
|
Tilt M2 Ft by X"
|
change x-tilt by -X"
|
Tilt M2 N1 by Y"
|
change y-tilt by +Y"
|
Tilt M2 N2 by Y"
|
change y-tilt by -Y"
|
As the telescope moves down in elevation, the secondary mirror
moves in two directions. It moves away from the primary owing to the
decreased axial force on the secondary spider rods. This motion
results in a change of the telescope focus position as a function of
elevation angle. The secondary also translates toward the front of
the telescope owing to the flexure of the main truss and to flexures
in the flex pivots which support the secondary mirror on the
actuators. Earlier studies have indicated that the total amount of
translation is about evenly split between the give in these two
support elements. This translation results primarily in an increase
in coma in the telescope optics.
Figure 1 shows
the tilts required to correct for the translation of the secondary
towards the front of the telescope as it moves from the horizon (at
an elevation angle of 0 degrees) towards the zenith (90 degrees).
There is no evidence for any variation of the y-tilts with telescope
elevation angle. This is what we hoped to see! The scatter in the
y-tilts has a standard deviation of 4.1 arcseconds. These errors are
quite consistent with the mirror position errors seen when the
Heidenhain encoders are not used for position feedback of the
actuators. Its quite possible that the scatter in the points seen
here are dominated by position errors of the actuators themselves.
The x-tilts in Figure
1 clearly show a variation with elevation angle. This variation
is fit by the solid line shown in the figure. The functional form of
the fit is given in the lower ledgend and was chosen to match that
available in the TCC. The coefficients m1 through m3 need to be added
to those that are currently in the TCC to correct for the secondary
translation with respect to the primary.
Figure 2 shows
the defocus as a function of telescope elevation angle as measured by
the Shack-Hartmann analysis. We were not manually changing the focus
during these measurements, but the collimation subroutine was active
for this entire set of measurements. The collimation subroutine
should have made the focus independent of telescope elevation angle,
but Figure 2 clearly shows a residual variation. This implies that
the coefficients used to correct for the telescope sag can be
substantially improved.
Table 2 gives the TCC coefficients which are currently active, and
the values that Figures
1 and 2 imply
are needed to correct for both translation and sag of the secondary
mirror. The current tilt and piston coefficients used by the TCC may
be found in the TINST directory in the file DEFAULT.DAT. To obtain
the new tilt and piston coefficients, the tilt coefficients from
Figure 1 were
coadded to the original tilt coefficients. Likewise, the coefficients
from Figure 2 were coadded to the
original pistion coefficients.
Table 2. Suggested Changes to the TCC Tilt and Sag
Coefficients
Coefficient Name
|
Original Coefficients
|
New Values
|
SecPistCoef (constant term)
|
300 (µm)
|
280
|
(sin(altitude) term)
|
-410 (µm)
|
-400
|
(cos(altitude) term)
|
0 (µm)
|
-28
|
|
|
|
SecXTiltCoef (constant term)
|
-34 (arcseconds)
|
-107
|
(sin(alt) term)
|
0 (arcseconds)
|
24
|
(cos(alt) term)
|
0 (arcseconds)
|
71
|
|
|
|
SecYTiltCoef (constant term)
|
25 (arcseconds)
|
20
|
(sin(alt) term)
|
0 (arcseconds)
|
0
|
(cos(alt) term)
|
0 (arcseconds)
|
0
|
These new coefficients should be implemented on the telescope as
soon as possible. The updates for the "piston" coefficients (I refer
to this as "sag" in this report!) can be implemented immediately.
However, the tilt coefficients required to correct for telescope coma
might have to wait until a new pointing model can be acquired. The
new tilt coefficients should be first entered into DEFAULT.DAT and
then a new pointing model should be obtained. If this is not done,
then pointing errors as large as 13 arcseconds will be superimposed
on the current model. If the site staff thinks that additional
pointing errors this large can be tolerated, then they can
immediately implement all of these corrections.