NPF: mirror development in Chile
Abstract
In the era of high-angular resolution astronomical instrumentation, where long and very long baseline interferometers (constituted by many, 20 or more, telescopes) are expected to work not only in the millimeter and submillimeter domain, but also at near and mid infrared wavelengths (experiments such as the Planet Formation Imager, PFI, see Monnier et al. 2018 for an update on its design); any promising strategy to alleviate the costs of the individual telescopes involved needs to be explored. In a recent collaboration between engineers, experimental physicists and astronomers in Valparaiso, Chile, we are gaining expertise in the production of light carbon fiber polymer reinforced mirrors. The working principle consists in replicating a glass, or other substrate, mandrel surface with the mirrored adequate curvature, surface characteristics and general shape. Once the carbon fiber base has hardened, previous studies have shown that it can be coated (aluminum) using standard coating processes/techniques designed for glass-based mirrors. The resulting surface quality is highly dependent on the temperature and humidity control among other variables. Current efforts are focused on improving the smoothness of the resulting surfaces to meet near/mid infrared specifications, overcoming, among others, possible deteriorations derived from the replication process. In a second step, at the validation and quality control stage, the mirrors are characterized using simple/traditional tools like spherometers (down to micron precision), but also an optical bench with a Shack-Hartman wavefront sensor. This research line is developed in parallel with a more classical glass-based approach, and in both cases we are prototyping at the small scale of few tens of cms. We here present our progress on these two approaches.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1807.06668,
title = {NPF: mirror development in Chile},
author = {Sebastián Zúñiga-Fernández and Amelia Bayo and Johan Olofsson and Leslie Pedrero and Claudio Lobos and Elias Rozas and Nicolás Soto and Matthias Schreiber and Pedro Escárate and Christian Romero and Hayk Hakobyan and Jorge Cuadra and Cristopher Rozas and John D. Monnier and Stefan Kraus and Mike J. Ireland and Pedro Mardones},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1807.06668},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
13 pages, SPIE Proceedings Volume 10700, Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes VII; 107003X (2018). Event: SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation, 2018, Austin, Texas, United States