Title: Engineering: NAHUAL Ireland
1Engineering NAHUAL Ireland
- Acquisition Camera, Focal Plane Mechanisms and
Layout - Tully Peacocke, National University of Ireland
Maynooth - Carlos del Burgo, Dublin Institute for Advanced
Studies - Niall Murphy, Dublin Institute of Technology
2Overview
- What is the focal plane layout to be?
- Advantages and disadvantages of two concepts.
- Packaging, cost, baffles, risk, .
- The Acquisition camera
- Focal plane slit deployment
- Time scale for funding and effort
- Funding and effort available in Ireland
- Delivery schedule
3Focal plane layout 1
- Ideally need as small an entrance window as
possible - Must admit 10 arc second field.
- Optimal heat rejection reflecting prolate
spheroidal baffle. - Stable alignment of feed from telescope to the
slit in all modes. - Stable alignment of acquisition camera to the
science instrument. - Manufacturing and maintenance cost and complexity.
4Focal plane layout 2
- Current design has two paths to the slit.
- The four fold mirrors must pass the 10 second
field in both directions. - We lose 50mm of space between the telescope and
the focal plane. - Cannot fit the acquisition camera into the main
cryostat two cryostats. - ADC in double pass to acquisition camera.
- Illustration of the focal plane layout with both
modes.
5Focal plane layout 3
- Small acquisition camera within the main
cryostat. - Aligned to the science instrument once only.
- Can be used for alignment of the instrument to
the telescope. - Window clear aperture ø17mm admits full field of
view. - ADC used in single pass only.
Alternative no fold mirrors between the window
and the slit. (Optical path length between
window and slit same as in previous diagram.)
Here the optics are folded out of plane of the
optical bench (TBC).
6Focal plane layout 4
- Having the acquisition camera within the main
cryostat has the following additional advantages - The gas cell is kept to a minimum diameter.
- Higher throughput 4 mirrors gt 5-7 loss.
- Secondary mode stability is greater both
versions have the same slit interchange
requirements, - but no moving mirrors this is critical the
mirrors have pitch, roll and yaw as well as the
problem of parking position. This risks degraded
secondary mode. - 50mm extra space between telescope and instrument
and grating 100mm further forward gt smaller
cryostat.
7Focal plane layout 5
- No secondary cryostat cost and maintenance
saving. - Alignment of camera to main optics is done once
at assembly, and remains fixed. - ADC used in single pass smaller prisms. Also the
acquisition camera sees the same aberration as
slit. - Potential risk to main mode needs to be
considered see later slide. - If secondary mode is unstable, both methods have
the same fall-back to main mode only operation.
8Acquisition camera 1
- Provisional design based around NICMOS InGaTe
detector - Operating temperature 70K
- Detector size 256 x 256 pixels
- Pixel size 40 microns
- Plate scale 1.024 mm per arc second, pixel scale
0.039 arc seconds per pixel - Image space F 13.14
- Field of view 10 X 10
- Wavelength range 1.0 to 2.5 microns
- Total mass of glass 12 g (fold mirror not
included)
9Acquisition camera 2
10Acquisition camera 3
11Acquisition camera 4
12Acquisition camera 5
Bounding square is one pixel.
13Acquisition camera 6
- The design is only provisional
- If the location of the camera is to be outside
the main cryostat it will have to change
completely. - If inside the main cryostat the packaging
constraints may force changes work with the
mechanical engineers and cryostat designers. - A change in the choice of the detector will force
a change in the design, but only in detail. - Need to know if a filter wheel is required.
- Filters would need to be of ø 10mm.
- How many would be needed?
14Acquisition camera 7
- Basic concept for the mounting is
- Mount off the main optical bench, but on G10
truss. - Cold strap directly to the cold bath no thermal
contact with the optical bench. - Must have a fixed optical design before any
mechanical design work is started - The exact configuration (folding, mounting etc)
can change, but not the optics or the detector. - Could design in a filter wheel that is never
fitted, just build in a compensation plate.
15Focal plane slit deployment 1
- We are proposing to design, build and test a slit
deployment wheel. - Provisional specification
- Six slits and pinholes.
- Repeatability 0.1µm spectral direction, 3 µm
spatial. - Stability spectral 0.1 (1.0) µm, and for
pinholes needs to be 0.1µm (?) spatial.
(Compare this with 1/(plate scale) 824 µm per
arc second.) - These are of the of the order
- 1 milliradian at the axle.
- 1/1000 (1/100) pixels in the spectral direction
on the science detector.
16Focal plane slit deployment 2
- How do you test a wheel for 0.1 µm tolerances?
- Method 1
- Use capacitive sensors commercially available
with resolutions down to 2 nm. We need 50 nm. - Preliminary testing warm, then proof of
conformance to specification in a test cryostat. - Monitor long period stability (hours).
- Method 2
- Direct observation for repeatability tests.
- Lambertian illumination of pinhole and microscope
type setup, CCD and image processing. - Both methods are non-contact.
17Focal plane slit deployment 3
- Drive mechanism to be decided by test
- either a stepper motor with no holding current,
ideally no gearing. Requires a datum, - or modified Geneva mechanism. No datum required.
- Use the acquisition camera and calibration source
to ensure that the correct slit is deployed - but would not have resolution required for check
on accuracy etc. Can use science detector for
that. - No holding current and minimal heat generation
when deploying a slit is important. - Must not require encoding.
18Funding and available effort 1
- We have received 38K funding for a full-time
postgraduate student to work on the mechanical
engineering of the acquisition camera and focal
plane mechanisms subject to need. - Supervised by Tully Peacocke (optics/opto-mechanic
s) Niall Murphy (mechanical engineering and
testing) Carlos del Burgo (advisory supervisor). - Supported by the design, manufacture and test
facilities and staff of DIT. - Starts October 2008 for two years.
- Optical design effort available T. Peacocke.
19Funding and available effort 2
- Need to decide what work is to be undertaken, and
when. - Is the current layout fixed?
- If so, we need to be told what is to be done
because none of our proposals are valid. - New design for the acquisition camera must be
done quickly. - No design work on the focal plane layout and
mechanisms. - Guidance, specification and interface control
documentation must be provided by the system
engineer before we can do anything.
20Time scale for funding and effort
- We have two years to design, build and deliver
the acquisition camera opto-mechanics, and the
slit deployment mechanism, if that is required - Start date October 2008.
- After Sept. 2010 we cannot be certain that there
will be funding to continue mechanical
engineering work. - We can start on generic lens mount design and
cryogenic testing, and slit wheel design and
testing, but by Jan. 2009 we will need to have
started on the real system. Otherwise effort will
be lost permanently.
21Delivery schedule proposal
- We have proposed that there is a two phase
approach to the delivery of the project - Phase 1 main mode only
- The aim is to ensure that the time-line to main
mode operation is as short as possible with
minimum risk no moving parts gt no single point
mechanical failure risk. - Phase 2 Integration of secondary modes during a
scheduled instrument service/warm-up. - Install a thoroughly tested slit exchange
mechanism, any prisms, etc, etc. - Having obtained science grade data in Phase 1 we
can observe any effects due to mechanisms
introduced in Phase 2.