Title: The Thirty Meter Telescope
1The Thirty Meter Telescope
- Jerry Nelson, UCSC
- 2005 December 8
2Contents
- Lessons of History and Predicting the Future
- Scientific Potential of TMT
- TMT Organization
- TMT conceptual design
- Overall structure
- Optical design
- Primary mirror
- Segment geometry
- Segment fabrication
- Active control
- Enclosure
- Adaptive Optics
- Status
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4Predicting the future
- Proposed Future Ground Based Telescopes
- California Extremely Large Telescope (CELT) 30 m
- 20/20 (University of Arizona study) 30 m
equivalent - Giant Magellan Telescope 20m
- Euro 50 (Lund University study) 50m
- OWL (ESO study) 100m (lt60m)
- TMT (merger of CELT, GSMT, VLOT) 30m
- Major Issues (mainly cost)
- mass production of optics
- active control
- adaptive optics
- structural issues
- enclosure/ weather protection
5Science Potential for TMT
- Increased angular resolution
- With AO can reach 0.007 arc second resolution
(100x improvement) - Study morphological details of most distant
galaxies (cosmology) - Study details for star and planet formation
- Study stellar evolution in globular clusters
- Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei (black holes)
- Solar system objects
- Increased light gathering power
- With TMT can collect 9x the energy from an object
(over Keck) - Spectroscopy of most distant objects known
- Planet searches and their study
6Scientific Potential
- Seeing limited observations
- 0.3-1.0 µm
- Scale 2.18 mm/arc second (f/15)
- Wide field of view available 20 arcminutes
- Diffraction limited observations
- 1-25µm, mainly 1-2.5µm
- Thermal IR possible, but not most important
- At 1 µm angular resolution of 7 mas
- Resolution element size 15µm (at f/15, 1 µm
wavelength) - Large field of view 1 arc minute at 1 µm with
multi conjugate AO
7Thirty Meter Telescope
- TMT is a project to build a 30-m telescope
- UC and Caltech are partners (CELT) Canada
AURA - Design and prototyping money is here
- 70M total needed
- 35 UCCaltech (CELT) from Moore Foundation
- Canada contributes 17.5M
- AURA should contribute 17.5M (highly uncertain)
- Site is unknown (several candidates being
studied) - Project manager (Gary Sanders from LIGO)
- Project scientist (J. Nelson)
- Project office in Pasadena
8TMT Project Organization
9Original Point Designs
GSMT
CELT
VLOT
http//www.hia-iha.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/VLOT/index.html
http//celt.ucolick.org/
www.aura-nio.noao.edu/
10Site Selection
- We have a team of research scientists studying
potential sites for TMT - Sites are being studied in Chile, San Pedro
Martir (Baja) and Mauna Kea, HI - Measurements include
- Weather (cloudiness, wind, temperature, humidity,
dust) - Atmospheric seeing (total seeing with DIMMs,
profile with MASS and with SODARs) - Expect to select qualified sites in 2007
- Hope for competition between qualified sites to
host TMT
11TMT Optical Design
- Primary is 30m in diameter
- 738 segments, 1.2 m dia each
- Shape actively controlled (segment piston, tip,
tilt) - f/1.0 ellipsoid
- Final f/15 Aplantic Gregorian
- Secondary 3.5m in diameter (concave)
- 20 arc minute field of view with 0.5 arc second
images - 1 arc minute FOV with 0.001 arc second images
(design) - Science from 1 to 65 zenith angle
- Instruments at Nasmyth platforms
- Articulated tertiary allows direct feed to
multiple instruments with no additional optics (3
mirrors total) - 2 platforms 15x30 m
- Possible lower or upper platforms
12TMT Optics
1330m Primary Mirror Concept
14TMT
Keck
15TMT Reference Design
1632m
2m
40m
34m
60m
20m
17Segment Fabrication
- Segments are off axis sections of ellipse
- Requirements 20 nm rms surface (better than
Keck) - 90 µm deviation from sphere (Keck was 100µm)
- Fabrication study contracts (3) in place Sagem,
Zygo, ITT-Tinsley - Stressed mirror polishing (oap to sphere) favored
by all - Planetary polishing to increase efficiency
(simultaneous polishing of multiple mirrors) - Low expansion material will be used
- Final figure corrections with ion figuring likely
- Segment warping harnesses (WH)
- Will remove low spatial frequency segment errors
caused by testing errors, polishing errors,
support errors, thermal errors, alignment errors - Will ease tolerances (and costs) of fabrication,
etc
18Planetary polishing to produce 800 segments
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20Full stressing fixture
21Planetary Stressed Mirror Polishing
22Passive segment support
- Design work contracted to Hytec (Los Alamos)
- Basic requirements
- Support segments against gravity and thermal
disturbances - Maintain desired surface figure to 5 nm rms
- Accurately maintain segment in desired location
- Provide interface between actuators and mirror
- Provide stiff (50Hz natural frequency) support
- Allow for handling of segments for coating and
recoating - Allow for warping harnesses to adjust low order
shape of segment - Inexpensive to design, build, install, adjust
- Zero maintenance for life of telescope
23SSA Concept
24Active Control
- Active control algorithm (details by G. Chanan)
- Same idea as Keck edge sensors, actuators,
least squares fitting - Error propagation calculated to be acceptable
10x sensor noise - Edge sensors
- Relative to Keck, want lower cost, avoid
mechanical interlace - New sensor design is still capacitive, but on
edges of segment - Design by Mast and LBL engineering
- Actuators
- Relative to Keck, want lower cost, higher stroke
- Keck actuators used roller screw/hydro reducer
(position actuator) - TMT contract with Marjan to design and build a
voice coil based force actuator. This should
have 4x stroke and be 1/4 Keck cost
25Active Control Summary
- Selected a 0.6 m for segment size
- Item Keck TMT
- segment size 0.9m 0.6m
- segments 36 738
- edge sensors 168 4212
- actuators 108 2214
26Principle of active control with edge sensors
s
P1
Actuator (piston)
P2
Sensor (measures height difference)
P4
P3
Sensor signal depends only on motion of two
neighbor segments
P5
P7
P6
P8
P9
a are constant coefficients that depend only on
geometry
27Keck Sensor Geometry
R 35 m
Mirror Segment
7.5 cm
Sensor Mount
Sensor Body
Conducting Surfaces
Sensor Paddle
2 mm
L
28title
Proposed TMT Sensor Geometry
Non-Interlocking Sensors
29Concept of segment support
Segment
Whiffle Tree
Reference Frame
Moving Frame
Mirror Cell Truss
Actuator
Actuator
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31Enclosures
Design options under study (from NIO)
32Adaptive Optics for TMT
- First generation
- NFIRAOS
- Near IR AO system with rms wavefront error 190
nm. Generates Strehl ratio 0.7 at 2µm - Hoping to upgrade to rms wavefront 130 nm
sometime after first light - Large sky coverage (gt50)
- Na laser guide stars do atmospheric tomography
- Small field of view 10-1
- Remember diffraction limit at 1µm is 0.007 arcsec
- MIRAO
- 5-25µm diffraction limited system
33Science Instruments
- Seeing limited instruments (studies underway)
- HROS high resolution optical spectrometer-
HIRES - WFOS wide field optical spectrograph LRIS,
DEIMOS multi object spectrometer, Fov 20 arc
min - Diffraction limited instruments (studies
underway) - IRIS
- MIRES
- NIRES
- WIRC
- MOAO
34Construction Phase
- Approval to start ( available) Jan 2008
- Primary mirror detail design review Apr 2008
- Site Development FDR Apr 2008
- Complete enclosure Feb 2012
- Complete telescope installation Oct 2012
- Begin segment installation Aug 2012
- First light with 1/4 segments Jul 2013
- All segments installed, phased Apr 2014
- Begin TMT science Jan 2015
35Development phase
- Conceptual design review May 2006
- Cost review Sept 2006
36TMT AO Development Program
- DDP program addresses TMT AO architecture, design
and technology development - Key technologies and demonstrations
- MEMS
- Lasers
- Infrared tip-tilt wavefront sensing
- Open loop control
- Tomography
- Wavefront sensor
- Adaptive secondary technology
- AO development addressed by an 11.7M DDP plan
37 38TMT Experience with Adaptive Optics
UC Lick
Palomar
CFHT
Gemini
Keck
39Adaptive Optics has come of age!
Ghez (UCLA) collaborators
Gemini Hokupaa/QUIRC image of Galactic Center.
Expanded view shows IRS 13E W in Kp
40 x 40 arcsecond mosaic, color-composite NIRC2
image (at 2.2 um) of the Galactic Center using
Keck Laser
40NGS / LGS Comparison
NGS-AO best June 2004 (4 nights) 46 best x
(0.50x120) SR0.34, FWHM92 mas
41Keck AO Imaging of Uranus
Courtesy L. Sromovsky
42Representative Construction Budget
- Construction Phase (800M) Possible NSF
contribution - 2008 50M 12-25M
- 2009 100M 25-50M
- 2010 160M 40-80M
- 2011 180M 45-90M
- 2012 140M 35-70M
- 2013 100M 25-50M
- 2014 70M 18-35M
- Current range of estimates 600M-800M
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44CELT AO Approach
- We are exploring a staged AO implementation, to
match the evolving technology - Each level change has a smaller wavefront error
- Each level change requires more and better
deformable mirrors - Each level change requires more laser beacons
- Each level change delivers better image quality
45 46MCAO technology needs
47TMT Reference Design
- Following a detailed engineering study, the
partnership has agreed on a single basic
reference design - 30m filled aperture, highly segmented
- aplanatic Gregorian (AG) two mirror telescope
- f/1 primary
- f/15 final focus
- Field of view 20 arcmin
- Elevation axis in front of the primary
- Wavelength coverage 0.31 28 µm
- Operational zenith angle range 1 thru 65
- Both seeing-limited and adaptive optics observing
modes - First generation instrument requirements defined
- AO system requirements defined