Paper
4 November 1982 Effects Of Primary Mirror Segmentation On Telescope Image Quality
Terry S. Mast, Jerry E. Nelson, William J. Welch
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Abstract
A number of designs for future astronomical telescopes call for large primary mirrors that are mosaics of smaller mirrors. We describe here a study of some characteristics of the images expected from a telescope with a primary mirror composed of 36 hexagonal segments. Various effects caused by the segmentation and imperfections in the segment fabrication and control have been analyzed using physical optics. The diffraction-limited image distribution from the segmentation geometry of the primary is derived, and the diffraction spikes are shown to be similar to those caused by secondary support struts in existing telescopes. A general relation between surface quality and image quality is given, and the implications for surface quality tolerances are discussed. The optical effects of segment phasing errors are derived, showing that at least for visible light observations the phasing is unimportant. For observations at 10 μm near diffraction-limited perfor-mance can be achieved with a 10 meter aperture requiring that the segments be phased correctly at this wavelength.
© (1982) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Terry S. Mast, Jerry E. Nelson, and William J. Welch "Effects Of Primary Mirror Segmentation On Telescope Image Quality", Proc. SPIE 0332, Advanced Technology Optical Telescopes I, (4 November 1982); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.933512
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image segmentation

Diffraction

Mirrors

Telescopes

Visible radiation

Atmospheric optics

Polishing

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