Title: Diapositive 1
1INSTALLING A FRESNEL IMAGER ON A 122 YEARS OLD
REFRACTOR
Jean-Pierre Rivet CNRS, Observatoire de la Cote
dAzur
Milliarcsecond imaging in the UV- Optical
domains Preparing the way to space borne Fresnel
Imagers, Nice, 23-25 Sept. 2009
2The 76cm refractor
Available since 1887 Refurbished in 1966 Focal
length 1789 cm _at_ 546 nm Diameter 76
cm Mount German equatorial Dome diameter 24
m Dome weight ?93 000 kg Design Ch. Garnier,
G. Eiffel Registered as an historical
monument Still active scientifically...
3Why on this instrument ?
- The 76 cm refractor in Nice is
- an 18 meters-long optical bench (no beam folding
required), - on an equatorial mount,
- easily available,
- with local scientific and technical environment.
18 m
4The drawbacks
- Less than ideal celestial tracking
- Seeing conditions
- Light pollution
- No build-in automatic guiding available
- Tube flexions
- Constraints due to the status of historical
monument - modifications forbidden on genuine parts
- only fully reversible actions allowed
5The mechanical layoutof prototype Generation
1.5
- Milestones
- Prototype Generation 1 ? laboratory testbed,
Toulouse, 2008 - Prototype Generation 1.5 ? first on-sky
experiment, Nice, July 2009 - Prototype Generation 2 ? fully featured on-sky
testbed, Nice, October 2009 ?
Optical rail (field optics, 0th order
mask, correctors, cameras)
Fresnel array
Not to scale !
18 m refractor tube
76 cm objective lens
6The optical rail
Imaging doublet
Zero order mask
CCD Camera SXVH9 (1)
Field optics (Maksutov)
2-axis fork mount
Flip mirror
Optical rail (2 meters)
XY motorized linear stages
Link to refractor tube
Not to scale !
16 mm Blazed Fresnel lens
Link to refractor tube
Baffles
(1) Starlight Express CCD Camera 1392?1040 pixels
of 6.45?m. Sensor Framos ICX285
7The Fresnel array
Laser-machined Copper-Beryllium blade 20cm ? 20
cm 700 Fresnel zones (on the ½ diagonal)
8The Fresnel array
9Reversible bindings
- The Fresnel Imager is attached to the refractor
tube - in a fully reversible way
Shackles
Stay tensioners
Steel strip
Refractor tube
Felt soles
Fresnel imager mount
10Fork mount for the optical rail
- The optical rails orientation can be fine-tuned
for optimal - chromatism correction
Refractor tube
Auxiliary refractor (finder)
Two-axis fork mount
Link to the refractor tube
Optical rail
Safety steel strip
11Remote-controlled chromatism correction
- The optical rail orientation with respect to the
Fresnel array - can be remote-controlled, to compensate for tube
flexions
Link to the refractor tube
Motorized linear stages (X, Y)
Connection pin
Flexible copper plate
Optical rail interface
Optical rail
12Towards Generation 2 testbed
C1
- Full-size blazed Fresnel lens (diameter 58 mm
instead of 16 mm) - ? available, integrated to be tested on-sky
- Andor Lucas R science and guiding EMCCD
cameras - (1004?1002 8?m pixels), with dedicated software
- ? to be delivered soon
- 100 Hz tip-tilt corrector
- ? lab tested to be integrated and tested on-sky
- New generation refractors slow motion keypad
(computer-driven) - ? available, integrated to be tested on-sky
- Flexion compensators for the optical rail
- ? to be integrated and tested on-sky
Expected completion date November 2009
1358mm blazed Fresnel lens
- Diameter 58 mm
- Number of zones 696
- Substrate Fused silica
TO BE TESTED ON SKY
14100 Hz tip-tilt corrector
C1
- The imaging doublet is mounted on XY piezo
translator, driven - by a guiding camera, through a 100 Hz
computer-based servo-loop, - for real-time correction of turbulent tip-tilt,
tube flexion, and - celestial tracking defects.
- Refractors slow motion keypad modified to be
computer-driven
Imaging doublet
XY piezo translator (replaced by a fake aluminium
part on this image)
TO BE TESTED ON SKY
Mechanical support
15Thank you for your attention !