Title: New%20Solar%20Telescope%20in%20Big%20Bear%20Solar%20Observatory
1New Solar Telescope in Big Bear Solar Observatory
- Philip R. Goode
- Big Bear Solar Observatory
- Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research
- New Jersey Institute of Technology
2Motivations for NST
- Fundamental Scale of Solar Magnetism
- Solar magnetic field (bundled) fibers
- Flares and CMEs origins
- Satellite data a complement
- Space Weather
- Solar storms can damage space assets and
terrestrial telecommunications/power grid - Telescope Technology Challenges
- Off-axis Telescope
- Heat Control
- Adaptive Optics
3New Solar Telescope (NST)
- Collaborators
- UHawaii
- UArizona
- KASI/SNU
- Federal Funding
- NSF
- AFOSR
- NASA
- KoSF
4BBSO/NSTers
Roy Coulter
Nicolas Gorceix
Jeff Nenow
John Varsik
Sergey Shumko
Mark Vincent
Vlad Abramenko
Randy Fear
5BBSOers
Erika Norro
Vasyl Yurchyshyn
Valentyna Abramenko
Chang Liu
Alla Shumko
Mark Klebba
6Atmospheric Seeing
- Why BBSO Site?
- The character of the seeing at Big Bear differs
markedly from the high altitude, volcanic island
sites measured in the ATST site survey. - The NST primary mirror, at 14 m, will be above
the 8 m height of the detector system used to
take these data.
7Big Bear Solar Observatory BBSO was built by
Caltech in 1969. The dome sits at the end of a
1000 ft. causeway on Big Bear Lakes north shore
at 6,750 foot elevation. Observatory was
transferred from Caltech to NJIT in July 1997.
The surrounding waters
of Big Bear
Lake reduce
ground level
convection,
and predominate
winds
bring smooth air flows
across the flat surface of
the lake providing superb conditions for solar
observing.
8Telescope
9Big Bear Solar Observatory New Solar Telescope
The New Solar Telescope Polarimeters and
SNU-FISS Spectrograph
Instrumentation Two instrument stations will be
used with the NST The coude lab provides
stable optical benches in a temperature
controlled environment. A spectrograph and 2
magnetographs are planned for the initial
observing campaigns. The coude will be fed by
the adaptive optics module allowing
diffraction-limited imaging at all wavelengths.
10NSTs Place Under the Sun
- NST Science
- High-resolution, high-cadence studies of solar
flares - Structure/evolution of magnetic fields in flaring
active regions - Dynamics of kGauss flux tubes
- Magneto-convection in sunspots
- Heating of the upper atmosphere
- Upgraded instrumentation (2nd generation)
- New (imaging) polarimeters (IR visible)
- Real-time image restoration
- Spectrograph - FISS
- Adaptive optics
- By 2008 Ready to solve many space weather
problems - SDO, STEREO and Solar-B in space (0.5 m
telescope in space) - 1.01.5 m telescopes in Europe (THEMIS, SST,
GREGOR) - No ATST before 2016
11NST BBSO/UH/KASSI/UA
- 1.6 m clear aperture (1.7m blank) being figured
by Steward Mirror Lab - Active optics (36 actuators in PM mirror cell) to
control thermally induced variations airknifes,
backside cooling - Primary f/ 2.4, 4.4 m telescope length, lt20 nm
surface quality, lt10 Å µroughness, and blank of
Zerodur with CTE of (0.01.0) ? 10-7 per C - Observable wavelengths 0.391.6 µm with AO and
gt0.39 µm without AO - FOV 180 in optical labs or 1/2 in prime focus
- Realtime telescope alignment
- Polarization, wavefront sensing and calibration
optics immediately before M3 - Diffraction limit 0.06 _at_ 0.5 µm and 0.2 _at_ 1.56
µm
12Primary Mirror
13Optical testing measuring aspheric surfaces
- Interferometers use light to measure to 1 nm
surface errors, for spherical or flat surfaces - We need to measure aspheric (non-spherical)
surfaces - CGH can change spherical wavefronts to aspheric,
allowing the use of interferometers for measuring
aspheric surfaces
Aspheric surface to be measured
aspherical wavefront
Spherical wavefront
Interferometer
CGH
14Optical test for NST mirror
50 cm mirror
10 cm CGH
15 cm lens
4D interferometer
10 µm alignment tolerances
1.7-m primary mirror Off-axis piece of f/0.7
parent
15Mirror Testing
16Test Tower
17PM Final Figuring
18Residual Figure Errors
19Active Optics
- The primary mirror is supported by 36 axial and 6
tangential actuators. These force based servos
will compensate for gravity and thermally induced
errors in the mirror figure. - A wavefront sensing system is being developed to
control the active optics components. - Realtime telescope alignment, fast tip/tilt and
M1 figure control
20Primary Mirror (M1) Thermal Control
- Function Mitigate mirror seeing
seeing
21Big Bear Solar Observatory New Solar Telescope
Telescope Design
The NST is an off-axis section of 5.3 meter,
f0.73 Gregorian telescope. The result is an
f2.4, 1.6 meter system. The design offers an
unobstructed pupil allowing superior adaptive
optics performance and low scattered light. The
prime focus, where most of the solar radiation
must be reflected/absorbed, is accessible without
obstructing the light path. A small (3.5 mm)
field stop (UH) at prime focus limits the
radiation loads transmitted to the downstream
optics. Polarization optics before M3
22Adaptive Optics
23Adaptive Optics
24Big Bear Solar Observatory
25Optical Support Structure
26Dome Removal
27New Dome
28Old Telescope Removal
29Fly Away
30Fork and Spectrograph, etc.
31Empty Dome
Ala Saadeghvaziri
32New Pier
33New Pier
34Secondary Mirror(s)
- SM is Zerodur from Schott (plano-plano)
- Space Optics Research Lab has figured 0.5 m
mirror on axis - Cut into two concave elliptical SMs (140 and 145
mm) - lt20 nm surface quality and foci downstream at
f1300 0.5 mm (if measured from on-axis mirror
optical center) and f26482 10 mm - Mirrors silver coated
- Mirrors in BBSO and were tested in UA Mirror Lab
in Summer 2007
35Prime Focus
36Nasmyth Focus
37Telescope Control System
38Collaborate and Plan for SuccessFirst Light
Work
- High Order Adaptive Optics
- National Solar Observatory/KIS collaboration
- Nasmyth Teledyne Camera
- KASI Park, Young-Deuk
- FISS Installation/Operation
- SNU Chae, Jongchul
- VIM/IRIM
- NJIT - Park, Sung-Hong
- Far IR
- Boulder/Tucson/BB collaboration
- WFS, Polarization, etc.
- Your Project???
39Big Bear Solar Observatory New Solar Telescope
Timeline
Dome complete Mar. 2008 OSS Delivery May
2008 PM Delivery Apr 2008 Telescope
Installation May 2008 First Light - May
2008 Full operation Spring 2009