Paper
12 July 2018 Edge sensor concept for segment stabilization
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
To meet ambitious science goals and leverage NASA investments for the James Webb Space Telescope, some proposed mission concepts include large aperture telescopes with segmented primary mirrors. Aberration control at the segment level becomes critical for these architectures because rigid body motion of the individual mirrors overtakes full aperture aberrations as the driver for wavefront stability. Perturbations at the segment level cannot be effectively sensed by existing full pupil low-order wavefront sensors because the errors are discontinuous and low-order techniques applied to individual segments would have insufficient photon flux. Thus, an additional “mid-order” control loop is required. We propose the use of capacitive edge sensors to locally sense the relative motion of segments in piston, tip and tilt, which then provide input to a compensation arm. Ball Aerospace has developed capacitive sensor technology with proven measurement precision of <12 pm RMS that can be adapted for measuring primary mirror segment motion. This performance approaches the 10 pm stability often stated as a requirement for direct imaging of earth-like exoplanets with a coronagraph. Using the geometry of the existing hardware as a baseline, the sensor gap and plate area can be scaled to accommodate mounting to mirror segments while maintaining or increasing sensitivity and multiple plates in different orientations can be used to sense individual degrees of freedom. This paper will present measured results from the Ball capacitive sensor and use those results to develop expected sensitives and a notional sensor head geometry for stabilizing a large, segmented primary mirror with edge sensors.
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Laura E. Coyle, J. Scott Knight, and Michael Adkins "Edge sensor concept for segment stabilization", Proc. SPIE 10698, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave, 1069869 (12 July 2018); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2312224
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Space telescopes

Telescopes

Mirrors

Image segmentation

Wavefronts

Coronagraphy

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