Title: Optical Telescope Assembly WBS 2'2
1Optical Telescope AssemblyWBS 2.2
- M. Lampton
- Space Sciences Laboratory
- University of California Berkeley
- 09 July 2002
2Telescope Overview
- Schedule and WBS Overview
- Science Driven Requirements
- Baseline Characteristics
- Telescope Status
- RD Issues
- RD Goals
- RD Schedule
- RD Manpower
- RD Costs
- RD Management
- Summary
3Overall Scheduledraft May 28 2002
4Telescope WBS Overview
2.2.1 TELESCOPE MANAGEMENT 2.2.1.1
Telescope Management 2.2.1.2 Resource
Management 2.2.1.3 Schedule
Management 2.2.1.4 Configuration
Management 2.2.1.5 Reviews 2.2.1.6
Travel 2.2.1.7 Contracts 2.2.2
TELESCOPE SYSTEMS ENGINEERING 2.2.2.1
Develop telescope requirements 2.2.2.2
Telescope design and evaluate trades 2.2.2.3
Telescope analyses 2.2.2.3.1 Optical
performance 2.2.2.3.2 Stray light 2.2.2.4
Telescope IT planning 2.2.3 TELESCOPE
SUBSYSTEMS 2.2.3.1 Optical subsystems
GSE 2.2.3.1.1 Mirrors 2.2.3.1.2
Baffles 2.2.3.2 Mechanical structure
GSE 2.2.3.2.1 Precision metering
structure 2.2.3.2.2 Mechanisms focussers,
alignment... 2.2.3.2.2.1 Mirror
actuators 2.2.3.2.2.2 Shutter 2.2.3.3
Thermal control 2.2.3.4 Electrical 2.2.4
TELESCOPE INTEGRATION AND TEST 2.2.5
TELESCOPE SOFTWARE 2.2.6 TELESCOPE
SUPPORTING ACTIVITIES
5Telescope Science Driven Requirements
- Light Gathering Power
- must measure SNe 4 magnitudes fainter than 26
magnitude peak - want SNR of 301 at peak brightness, aggregate
exposure fit - presence of zodiacal light foreground radiation
- time-on-target limited by revisit rate number
of fields - spectroscopy demands comparable time-on-target
- requires geometric diameter 2 meters
- Angular resolution
- signal to noise ratio is driver
- diffraction limit is an obvious bound
- Airy disk at one micron wavelength is 0.12
arcseconds FWHM - all blur contributions must be budgeted
- Field of View
- determined by required supernova discovery rate
- volume of space is proportional to field of view
- one degree field of view will deliver the
requisite discovery rate - Wavelength Coverage
- 0.35 to 1.7 microns requires all-reflector
optical train
6Telescope Status Baseline Configuration
- Prolate ellipsoid concave primary mirror
- Hyperbolic convex secondary mirror
- Flat folding mirror with central hole
- Prolate ellipsoid concave tertiary mirror
- Flat focal plane
- Delivers lt 0.06 arcsecond FWHM geometrical blur
over annular field 1.37 sqdeg - Adapts to focal lengths 15
- meters through 30 meters
- baseline21.66m
- Provides side-mounted
- detector location for best
- detector cooling
7Baseline OTA Characteristics
- Aperture 2 meters
- Annular Field of View 1 sq deg
- Wavelength Range 0.35 to 1.7 microns
- Strehl gt90 at 1.0 microns
- WFE lt50 nm RMS
- Focal surface flat
- EFL 21.66 meters, f/11
- Stray light ltlt Zodiacal foreground
8Telescope Status History
- Wide-field high-resolution telescopes are NOT new
- Schmidt cameras (1930 to present)
- Wynne cameras (e.g. FAUST)
- Field-widened cassegrains, Gascoigne (1977-)
SDSS - Paul three-mirror telescopes (1935) and
Baker-Paul - Cook three-mirror anastigmats TMAs (1979)
- Williams TMA variants (1979)
- Korsch family of TMAs (1980)
- Angel-Woolf-Epps three-mirror design (1982)
- McGraw three-mirror system (1982)
- Willstrop Mersenne Schmidt family (1984)
- Kodak IKONOS Earth Resources telescope TMA
- LANL/Sandia/DoE Multispectral Thermal Imager TMA
9Telescope Status Milestones Accomplished
- 1999
- comparisons of alternative wide field telescope
configurations - found off-axis designs attractive but
unpackageable rejected - explored, discarded coaxial TMTs (Willstrop etc)
unworkable thermally - annular-field TMA concept rediscovered, developed
- 2000
- TMA43 (f/10) longitudinal rear axis, separate
NIR/VIS filter wheel - began mechanical, structural studies w/
subcontractor - explored vignetting (marginal), stray light
(marginal) - 2001
- US DoE RD Review
- efforts to achieve shorter optical package for
stiffness, stray light TMA55/56 - explored longer focal lengths for potentially
higher sampling TMA59 (f/15) - design validated at NASA/GSFC Instrument Systems
Analysis Laboratory - image quality stray light metering structure
actuators - 2002
- FIDO detector package, single focal plane,
transverse rear axis - TMA62 (f/11) transverse rear axis with filter
wheel - TMA63 (f/11) transverse rear axis, no filter
wheel
10Payload Layout 1
Secondary Mirror Hexapod Bonnet
Door Assembly
Main Baffle Assembly
Secondary Metering structure
Solar Array, Sun side
Primary Mirror
Optical Bench
Solar Array, Dark side
Instrument Metering Structure
Instrument Radiator
Tertiary Mirror
Instrument Bay
CCD detectorsNIR detectorsSpectrographFocal
Plane guiders Cryo/Particle shield
Fold-Flat Mirror
Spacecraft
ACS CD H Comm Power Data
Solid-state recorders
Shutter
Hi Gain Antenna
11Payload Layout 2
Telescope is a three-mirror anastigmat 2.0 meter
aperture 1.37 square degree field Lightweight
primary mirror Low-expansion materials Optics
kept near 290K Transverse rear axis Side Gigacam
location passive detector cooling combines Si
HgCdTe detectors Spectrometers share Gigacam
focal plane Few moving parts in
payload two-blade shutter for Gigacam focussers/ad
justers at secondary tertiary
12Payload Layout 3
13Telescope Image Quality Issues
- Image quality drives science SNR, exposure times,
.... - Many factors contribute to science image quality
- diffraction size of aperture, secondary baffle,
struts, ... - aberrations theoretical imaging performance
over field - manufacturing errors in mirrors
- misalignments misfocussing of optical elements
- dirt, contamination, or nonuniformity in mirror
coating - guiding errors
- spacecraft jitter
- detector issues
- constancy of the PSF is important to the weak
lensing science - Work has begun on a comprehensive budget
- ongoing simulation team efforts
- Bernsteins Advanced Exposure Time Calculator
PASP - telescope studies feed into the simulations
14Telescope Status Ray TraceTMA62/TMA63
configuration
Airy-disk zero at one micron wavelength 26
microns diam0.244arcsec
15Telescope Status Pupil Obscuration Trades
16Telescope Status Stray Light Trades
- Guiding principle keep total stray light FAR
BELOW natural Zodi - R.O.M. assessment gives...
- Natural Zodi (G.Aldering) 1 photon/pixel/sec/mic
ron - StarlightZodi scattered off primary mirror
0.002 - StarlightZodi scattered off support spider lt
0.001 - Sunlight scattered off forward outer baffle edge
2E-5 - Earthlight scattered off forward outer baffle
inner surface 0.02 - Total stray 0.02 photon/pixel/sec/micron
- Long outer baffle is clearly preferred
- limit is launch fairing and S/C size
- ASAP software in place
- ASAP training 2001 further training in 2003
- Preliminary telescope ASAP models being built
- ASAP illumination environment models being built
- Our intension is to track hardware ops changes
as they occur, allowing a system engineering
management of stray light.
17Telescope Technology Roadmap
- Existing technologies are suitable for SNAP
Optical Telescope Assembly - New materials, processes, test evaluation
methods are unnecessary - Mirror materials
- science driver stable figure to guarantee
constant focus and PSF - Corning ULE glass extensive NRO flight history
lightweight - Schott Zerodur glass/ceramic composite lower
cost, widely used in ground based astronomical
telescopes huge industrial base - Metering structure materials
- science driver stable structure for constant
focus and PSF - M55J carbon fiber cyanate ester resin epoxy
adhesive bonds - full report in Pankow presentation
- Mirror finishing technology
- conventional grind/polish/figure using abrasives
- ion-beam figuring available from two vendors
- Mirror surface metrology
- same as other space telescopes, e.g.
cassegrains - standard interferometer setups will do the job
for SNAP
18Telescope Status Mirror Materials Trade
- Corning ULE ultra-low expansion glass
- extremely low CTE 20-50 parts per billion per
dec C - face sheets bonded to honeycomb core
- achieves 85-90 lightweight anticipate 200kg
primary - extensive manufacturing test history
- meets our performance requirements
- attractive for its high natural resonance
frequencies, low sag - eases mass margin for entire mission
- Schott Zerodur glass/ceramic material
- extremely low CTE 20-50 parts per billion per
deg C - solid blank, weight relieved by milling backside
- achieves 70-85 lightweight anticipate 250kg
primary - extensive manufacturing test history
- meets our performance requirements
19Telescope Trade Studies Summary
- Trade Studies worked during Pre-RD Phase
- Optical configuration
gtgtTMA - Warm optics vs cold optics
gtgtwarm - FIDO integrated sensor array vs separated
gtgtintegrated - Trade Studies continuing through RD Phase
- Exact aperture cost schedule vs aperture
- Wavefront error cost vs performance
- focal length is 21.66m the best choice?
- pupil obsuration, diffraction, stray light...
- Primary mirror thickness, stiffness, mass trade
- resonance freqs, sag under 1G testing, ...
- Protoflight vs Prototype Flight metering
structures - Vendor-dependent issues
- mirror material ULE? Zerodur?
- test gravity unloading scheme
- test full aperture vs partial aperture
20Telescope Overall Risk Assessment
- Mirror fab/test risks
- Far less demanding than HST we are NIR not NUV
- yet -- need comprehensive test plan.
- Mechanical structural risks
- comprehensive test plan static, dynamic, etc
- Thermal and mechanical disturbance issues
- Easy thermal environment HEO has few eclipses
- Schedule risks OTA is a long lead item!
- Error budget fixturing, optical test equipment,
etc - Do we need a full-aperture reference test flat?
- Contamination control materials test plan
- Stray light control management test plan
21Telescope Main RD Issues
- Critical path telescope is a long lead item.
- how big is our slack?
- Need to begin development of the OTA
requirements document for potential bidders - Need to refine performance specifications
- optical image quality
- stability of focus, point spread function, ...
- Need to understand communicate tolerances
- Need to prepare draft Interface Control Documents
- optical
- thermal
- mechanical
- electrical
- Need to assess risks and take steps to minimize
them - Need to perform trade studies (outlined above)
22Telescope RD Phase Deliverables
- Telescope Requirements Specification Document
- include manufacturing tolerance alignment
specifications - Subcontractors Final Reports
- Metering Structure Concept Trades
- Telescope Mirror Materials Trade Study
- OTA Thermal Model and Results Summary
- Focusing/Alignment Tolerance Analysis
- Focusing/Alignment Mechanism Trade Study
- Front Aperture Door Trade Study
- Integration Flow and Test Plan
- Preliminary Stray Light Analysis
- Shutter Mechanism Reliability Failure Modes
Study - Telescope acquisition plan schedule/milestones,
cost.
23Telescope Acquisition Plan
- Potential Vendors Identified
- Ball Aerospace Systems Division (Boulder)
- Boeing-SVS (Albuquerque/Boulder)
- Brashear LP (Pittsburgh)
- Composite Optics Inc (San Diego)
- Corning Glass Works (Corning NY)
- Eastman Kodak (Rochester)
- Goodrich (Danbury)
- Lockheed-Martin Missiles Space Co (Sunnyvale)
- SAGEM/REOSC (Paris)
- These vendors have been briefed on SNAP mission
- Each has responded to our Request for Information
- Identify a route (materials, fabrication, test,
integration, test) - Milestones with appropriate incentives
- Visibility into contractor(s) activities
24Telescope RD Phase Management
- Management objective biddable Requirements
Document that reflects all science requirements
and trades - Experienced team has been assembled
- Have begun dialogs with prospective vendors
- Have begun examining potential fab/test/integratio
n flows - No need for high-risk advanced materials or
processes - Emphasize proven manufacturing test techniques
- We plan on selection of contractor(s) with
sufficient experience to bring successful
delivery cost schedule - This contractor mix defines the overall
acquisition plan
25OTA RD Schedule
26OTA RD Schedule
27Deliverables WBS 2.2 Telescope
28Telescope CDR Preparations Plan
- Fully complete and document all trade studies
- Supplement these with industry commentary
- Use system-engineering budgets to identify
optimum allocation of tolerances resources - Identify materials and fabrication alternatives
taking into account schedule risk and overall
cost - Detail the acquisition plan and milestones
- Prepare acceptance test plan, including
acceptance tests - Structural stability, thermal, stiffness, normal
modes, creep - Alignment and focussing plan
- Thermal vacuum and optical stability
- Stray light
- Gravity unloading plan
- Full-aperture and limited-aperture test
opportunities - Facilities needed, facilities available
29Telescope Summary
- Pre-RD
- converted science drivers into telescope
requirements - reviewed existing optical telescope concepts
- developed annular-field TMA configuration
- preliminary materials assessment
- begun to explore vendor capabilities
- started a budget for image quality
- RD Phase
- engineering trade studies and budgets
- manufacturing process risk assessments
- test plans and associated cost/risk trades
- facilities equipment
- prepare the acquisition plan
- performance specifications tolerance analysis
- create draft ICDs
- develop preliminary cost schedule ranges