Far-infrared astronomy has advanced rapidly since its inception in the late 1950s, driven by a maturing technology base and an expanding community of researchers. This advancement has shown that observations at far-infrared wavelengths are important in nearly all areas of astrophysics, from the search for habitable planets and the origin of life to the earliest stages of galaxy assembly in the first few hundred million years of cosmic history. The combination of a still-developing portfolio of technologies, particularly in the field of detectors, and a widening ensemble of platforms within which these technologies can be deployed, means that far-infrared astronomy holds the potential for paradigm-shifting advances over the next decade. We examine the current and future far-infrared observing platforms, including ground-based, suborbital, and space-based facilities, and discuss the technology development pathways that will enable and enhance these platforms to best address the challenges facing far-infrared astronomy in the 21st century.
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Lynx, one of the four strategic mission concepts under study for the 2020 Astrophysics Decadal Survey, provides leaps in capability over previous and planned x-ray missions and provides synergistic observations in the 2030s to a multitude of space- and ground-based observatories across all wavelengths. Lynx provides orders of magnitude improvement in sensitivity, on-axis subarcsecond imaging with arcsecond angular resolution over a large field of view, and high-resolution spectroscopy for point-like and extended sources in the 0.2- to 10-keV range. The Lynx architecture enables a broad range of unique and compelling science to be carried out mainly through a General Observer Program. This program is envisioned to include detecting the very first seed black holes, revealing the high-energy drivers of galaxy formation and evolution, and characterizing the mechanisms that govern stellar evolution and stellar ecosystems. The Lynx optics and science instruments are carefully designed to optimize the science capability and, when combined, form an exciting architecture that utilizes relatively mature technologies for a cost that is compatible with the projected NASA Astrophysics budget.
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The Lynx X-ray Grating Spectrograph (XGS) is responsible for providing high throughput and spectral resolution for soft x-ray energies. This instrument will help characterize the formation of galaxies and a large-scale structure in the universe. Such goals require large effective areas, >4000 cm2, and high resolving power, R > 5000, over much of the low-energy band, 0.2 to 2.0 keV. A concept design for the XGS using reflection gratings has the potential to achieve these requirements. The design uses achievable grating parameters, efficient packing of the grating array, and a compact detector layout. The concept is presented along with a detailed discussion of the considerations made in its determination.
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Lynx is one of four Surveyor-class mission concept studies for the 2020 Astrophysics Decadal Survey. It features an x-ray telescope with an unprecedented collecting area of 2 m2 at 1 keV and a point-spread function of 0.5 arc sec. We describe the status of critical-angle transmission (CAT) grating technology development and perform ray-traces for a CAT grating x-ray spectrometer that can reach high spectral resolving power λ / Δλ > 5000 (often exceeding 7500) and effective area around 4000 cm2 in the soft x-ray band (0.2 to 2 keV). To achieve these characteristics, about two-thirds of the aperture must be covered with gratings. CAT gratings are mostly transparent at high energies, and thus hard x-rays can still be used for simultaneous imaging spectroscopy using a microcalorimeter array. We simulate several design scenarios and investigate how subaperturing can be most effectively used to increase performance. For large gratings, the resolving power is limited by the deviation of flat gratings from the ideal Rowland torus surface. Chirped gratings, i.e., gratings where the spacing of grating bars is variable, can overcome this limitation. Alignment tolerances in many degrees of freedom can be achieved with machining tolerances. We outline the development path to CAT grating performance improvements and discuss future ray-trace work to refine the design of the spectrometer.
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The Lynx X-ray Observatory concept, under study for the 2020 NASA Decadal Survey, will require a telescope with ∼2 m2 of effective area and a point-spread function (PSF) with ∼0.5-arc sec half-power diameter (HPD) to meet its science goals. This requires extremely accurate thin grazing-incidence mirrors with a reflective x-ray coating. A mirror coating, such as 15-nm-thick iridium, can exhibit stress exceeding 1 GPa, significantly deforming segmented mirrors and blurring the PSF. The film stress and thickness are neither perfectly repeatable nor uniform. We use finite element analysis and ray tracing to quantify the effects of integrated stress inaccuracy, nonrepeatability, nonuniformity, and postmounting stress changes on segmented mirrors. We find that if Lynx uses segmented mirrors, it will likely require extremely small film stress (∼10 MPa) and nonuniformity (<1 % ). We show that realigning mirrors and matching complementary mirror pairs can reduce the HPD from uniform film stress by a factor of 2.3 × and 5 × , respectively. Doubling mirror thickness produces much less than the 4 × HPD reduction that would be expected from a flat mirror. The x-ray astronomy community has developed numerous methods of reducing the PSF blurring from film stress, and Lynx may require several of these in combination to achieve 0.5 arc sec HPD using segmented mirrors.
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Piezoelectric adjustable x-ray optics use magnetron sputtered thin film coatings on both sides of a thin curved glass substrate. To produce an optic suitable for a mission requiring high-angular resolution like “Lynx,” the integrated stresses (stress×thickness) of films on both sides of the optic must be approximately equal. Thus, understanding how sputtered film thickness distributions change for convex and concave curved substrates is necessary. To address this, thickness distributions of piezoelectric Pb0.995(Zr0.52Ti0.48)0.99Nb0.01O3 films are studied on flat, convex, and concave cylindrical substrates with a 220-mm radius of curvature. A mathematical model of the film thickness distribution is derived based on the geometric properties of the sputter tool and the substrate, and film thicknesses deposited with a commercially available sputtering tool are measured with spectroscopic ellipsometry. Experiment and modeled results for flat and convex curved substrates demonstrate good agreement, with average relative thickness distribution difference of 0.19% and −0.10% respectively, and a higher average difference of 1.4% for concave substrates. The calculated relative thickness distributions are applied to the convex and concave sides of a finite-element analysis (FEA) model of an adjustable x-ray optic prototype. The FEA model shows that, left uncorrected, the relative film thickness variation will yield an optic with an optical performance of 2.6 arc sec half power diameter (HPD) at 1 keV. However, the mirror figure can be corrected to diffraction-limited performance (0.3 arc sec HPD) using the piezoelectric adjusters, suggesting that the tolerances for applying a balanced integrated stress on both sides of a mirror are alleviated for adjustable x-ray optics as compared to traditional static x-ray mirrors. Furthermore, the piezoelectric adjusters will also allow changes in mirror figure over the telescope lifetime due to drift in the stress states of the x-ray surfaces to be corrected on orbit.
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The Lynx x-ray microcalorimeter instrument on the Lynx X-ray Observatory requires a state-of-the-art cryogenic system to enable high-precision and high-resolution x-ray spectroscopy. The cryogenic system and components described provide the required environment using cooling technologies that are already at relatively high technology readiness levels and are progressing toward flight-compatible subsystems. These subsystems comprise a cryostat, a 4.5-K mechanical cryocooler, and an adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator that provides substantial cooling power at 50 mK.
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The Lynx x-ray microcalorimeter (LXM) is an imaging spectrometer for the Lynx satellite mission, an x-ray telescope being considered by NASA to be a new flagship mission. Lynx will enable unique astrophysical observations into the x-ray universe due to its high angular resolution and large field of view. The LXM consists of an array of over 100,000 pixels and poses a significant technological challenge to achieve the high degree of multiplexing required to read out these sensors. We discuss the details of microwave superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) multiplexing and describe why it is ideally suited to the needs of the LXM. This case is made by summarizing the current and predicted performance of microwave SQUID multiplexing and describing the steps needed to optimize designs for all the LXM arrays. Finally, we describe our plan to advance the technology readiness level (TRL) of microwave SQUID multiplexing of the LXM microcalorimeters to TRL-5 by 2024.
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We are developing arrays of position-sensitive microcalorimeters for future x-ray astronomy applications. These position-sensitive devices commonly referred to as hydras consist of multiple x-ray absorbers, each with a different thermal coupling to a single-transition-edge sensor microcalorimeter. Their development is motivated by a desire to achieve very large pixel arrays with some modest compromise in performance. We report on the design, optimization, and first results from devices with small pitch pixels (<75 μm) being developed for a high-angular and energy resolution imaging spectrometer for Lynx. The Lynx x-ray space telescope is a flagship mission concept under study for the National Academy of Science 2020 decadal survey. Broadband full-width-half-maximum (FWHM) resolution measurements on a 9-pixel hydra have demonstrated ΔEFWHM = 2.23 ± 0.14 eV at Al-Kα, ΔEFWHM = 2.44 ± 0.29 eV at Mn-Kα, and ΔEFWHM = 3.39 ± 0.23 eV at Cu-Kα. Position discrimination is demonstrated to energies below <1 keV and the device performance is well-described by a finite-element model. Results from a prototype 20-pixel hydra with absorbers on a 50-μm pitch have shown ΔEFWHM = 3.38 ± 0.20 eV at Cr-Kα1. We are now optimizing designs specifically for Lynx and extending the number of absorbers up to 25/hydra. Numerical simulation suggests optimized designs could achieve ∼3 eV while being compatible with the bandwidth requirements of the state-of-the art multiplexed readout schemes, thus making a 100,000 pixel microcalorimeter instrument a realistic goal.
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One option for the detector technology to implement the Lynx x-ray microcalorimeter (LXM) focal plane arrays is the metallic magnetic calorimeter (MMC). Two-dimensional imaging arrays of MMCs measure the energy of x-ray photons by using a paramagnetic sensor to detect the temperature rise in a microfabricated x-ray absorber. While small arrays of MMCs have previously been demonstrated that have energy resolution better than the 3 eV requirement for LXM, we describe LXM prototype MMC arrays that have 55,800 x-ray pixels, thermally linked to 5688 sensors in “hydra” configurations, and that have sensor inductance increased to avoid signal loss from the stray inductance in the large-scale arrays when the detectors are read out with microwave superconducting quantum interference device multiplexers, and that use multilevel planarized superconducting wiring to provide low-inductance, low-crosstalk connections to each pixel. We describe the features of recently tested MMC prototype devices and simulations of expected performance in designs optimized for the three subarray types in LXM.
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NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) maintains an active research program toward the development of high-resolution, lightweight, grazing-incidence x-ray optics to serve the needs of future x-ray astronomy missions such as Lynx. MSFC development efforts include both direct fabrication (diamond turning and deterministic computer-controlled polishing) of mirror shells and replication of mirror shells (from figured, polished mandrels). Both techniques produce full-circumference monolithic (primary + secondary) shells that share the advantages of inherent stability, ease of assembly, and low production cost. However, to achieve high-angular resolution, MSFC is exploring significant technology advances needed to control sources of figure error including fabrication- and coating-induced stresses and mounting-induced distortions.
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A thermal oxide patterning method has proven to be effective for correcting coating-stress-induced distortion on flat silicon wafers. We report progress on developing this method for correcting curved silicon mirrors distorted by front-side iridium coatings. Owing to the difference in geometry, a finite element model has been established to calculate the appropriate duty cycle maps in thermal oxide hexagon patterns used for compensation. In addition, a photolithographic process, along with three-dimensional printed equipment, has been developed for creating patterns precisely on the back side of curved mirrors. The developed method has been used to recover the original surface shape of two silicon mirrors which are 100-mm long, 0.5-mm thick, having 312-mm radius of curvature, and 30 deg in azimuthal span (Wolter-I geometry). These mirrors’ front sides are sputter-coated by 20-nm iridium layers with ∼-70 N / m integrated stress. Measurement results show that the developed method can mitigate coating-induced distortion by a factor of ∼5 in RMS height and ∼4 in RMS slope error, corresponding to ∼0.5 arc sec RMS slope error. Residual errors after correction are dominated by mid-frequency ripples created during the annealing process, which will be resolved in the future. The presented method is precise and inexpensive and a potential candidate for resolving the coating stress issue for Lynx optics in the future.
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We describe an approach to build an x-ray mirror assembly that can meet Lynx’s requirements of high-angular resolution, large effective area, light weight, short production schedule, and low-production cost. Adopting a modular hierarchy, the assembly is composed of 37,492 mirror segments, each of which measures ∼100 mm × 100 mm × 0.5 mm. These segments are integrated into 611 modules, which are individually tested and qualified to meet both science performance and spaceflight environment requirements before they in turn are integrated into 12 metashells. The 12 metashells are then integrated to form the mirror assembly. This approach combines the latest precision polishing technology and the monocrystalline silicon material to fabricate the thin and lightweight mirror segments. Because of the use of commercially available equipment and material and because of its highly modular and hierarchical building-up process, this approach is highly amenable to automation and mass production to maximize production throughput and to minimize production schedule and cost. As of fall 2018, the basic elements of this approach, including substrate fabrication, coating, alignment, and bonding, have been validated by the successful building and testing of single-pair mirror modules. In the next few years, the many steps of the approach will be refined and perfected by repeatedly building and testing mirror modules containing progressively more mirror segments to fully meet science performance, spaceflight environments, as well as programmatic requirements of the Lynx mission and other proposed missions, such as AXIS.
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TOPICS: Field programmable gate arrays, Electronics, Field effect transistors, Digital signal processing, Microwave radiation, Signal processing, Multiplexers, Sensors, X-rays, Multiplexing
We are studying the development of space-flight compatible room-temperature electronics for the Lynx x-ray microcalorimeter (LXM) of the Lynx mission. The baseline readout technique for the LXM is microwave SQUID multiplexing. The key modules at room temperature are the RF electronics module and the digital electronics and event processor (DEEP). The RF module functions as frequency converters and mainly consists of local oscillators and I/Q mixers. The DEEP performs demultiplexing and event processing, and mainly consists of field-programmable gate arrays, ADCs, and DACs. We designed the RF electronics and DEEP to be flight ready, and estimated the power, size, and mass of those modules. There are two boxes each for the RF electronics and DEEP for segmentation, and the sizes of the boxes are 13 in. × 13 in. × 9 in. for the RF electronics and 15.5 in. × 11.5 in. × 9.5 in. for the DEEP. The estimated masses are 25.1 kg / box for the RF electronics box and 24.1 kg / box for the DEEP box. The maximum operating power for the RF electronics is 141 W or 70.5 W / box, and for the DEEP box is 615 W or 308 W / box. The overall power for those modules is 756 W. We describe the detail of the designs as well as the approaches to the estimation of resources, sizes, masses, and powers.
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Lynx is the future x-ray observatory with superb imaging capabilities (<1 arc sec half-energy width) and large throughput (2 m2 effective area @ 1 keV), which is being considered in the U.S. to take over Chandra. The implementation of the x-ray mirror module represents a very challenging aspect, and different approaches are being considered. Thin and low-weight substrates, working in grazing incidence configuration, are necessary to meet the severe mass constraints, but they have to also preserve the requirement of an excellent angular resolution. The use of monolithic glass (fused silica) shells is an attractive solution, provided that their thickness is kept very small [<4 mm for mirror shells up of 3-m diameter]. We present the optomechanical design of the Lynx mirror assembly based on this approach, together with the ongoing technological development process. In particular, we discuss the figuring process, which is based on direct polishing followed by an ion-beam figuring correction. A temporary structure is specifically devoted to support the shell during the figuring and polishing operations and to manage the handling of the shell through all phases up to integration into the final telescope supporting spoke wheel. The results achieved so far on a prototype shell will be discussed.
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Lynx requires large-format x-ray imaging detectors with performance at least as good as the best current-generation devices but with much higher readout rates. We are investigating an advanced charge-coupled device (CCD) detector architecture under development at MIT Lincoln Laboratory for use in the Lynx high-definition x-ray imager and x-ray grating spectrometer instruments. This architecture features a CMOS-compatible detector integrated with parallel CMOS signal processing chains. Fast, low-noise amplifiers and highly parallel signal processing provide the high frame rates required. CMOS-compatibility of the CCD enables low-power charge transfer and signal processing. We report on the performance of CMOS-compatible test CCDs read at pixel rates up to 5.0 Mpix s − 1 (50 times faster than Chandra ACIS CCDs), with transfer clock swings as low as 1.0-V peak-to-peak (power/gate-area comparable to ACIS CCDs at 100 times the parallel transfer rate). We measure read noise of 4.6 electrons RMS at 2.5 MHz and x-ray spectral resolution better than 150-eV full-width at half maximum at 5.9 keV for single-pixel events. We report charge transfer efficiency measurements and demonstrate that buried channel trough implants as narrow as 0.8 μm are effective in improving charge transfer performance. We find that the charge transfer efficiency of these devices drops significantly as detector temperature is reduced from ∼ − 30 ° C to −60 ° C. We point out the potential of previously demonstrated curved-detector fabrication technology for simplifying the design of the Lynx high-definition imager. We discuss the expected detector radiation tolerance at these relatively high transfer rates. Finally, we note that the high pixel “aspect ratio” (depletion depth: pixel size ≈9 ∶ 1) of our test devices is similar to that expected for Lynx detectors and discuss implications of this geometry for x-ray performance and noise requirements.
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TOPICS: Manufacturing, X-rays, Mirrors, Process modeling, Data modeling, Systems modeling, Failure analysis, Fiber Bragg gratings, Mathematical modeling, Data processing
The timely and predictable cost of the Lynx x-ray mirror assembly (XMA) is an essential element of the mission concept. We present an analytic model for the cost, schedule, and risk for the manufacture of a generalized system of many parts, and apply it to preliminary data of the manufacturing process for the XMA. The manufacturing process is modeled as a series of G / G / w queues. The optimization of the manufacturing process, to minimize total process time, comes from the selection of the value of w, the number of servers performing each step in the manufacturing process, to avoid bottlenecks and minimizing idle servers. This analysis also includes the effects of finite process yield on cost and schedule. The cost model is parameterized by the various elements of cost, including the production time, thus linking the cost and schedule models. The system of coupled equations is the cost and schedule model. The process data that must be collected on the manufacturing process during the ongoing technology development process such as process times, yields, and distributions is identified. We conclude with the next steps that will be taken to make this analysis more complete.
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Lynx is an x-ray telescope, one of four large satellite mission concepts currently being studied by NASA to be a flagship mission. One of Lynx’s three instruments is an imaging spectrometer called the Lynx x-ray microcalorimeter (LXM), an x-ray microcalorimeter behind an x-ray optic with an angular resolution of 0.5 arc sec and ∼2 m2 of area at 1 keV. The LXM will provide unparalleled diagnostics of distant extended structures and, in particular, will allow the detailed study of the role of cosmic feedback in the evolution of the Universe. We discuss the baseline design of LXM and some parallel approaches for some of the key technologies. The baseline sensor technology uses transition-edge sensors, but we also consider an alternative approach using metallic magnetic calorimeters. We discuss the requirements for the instrument, the pixel layout, and the baseline readout design, which uses microwave superconducting quantum interference devices and high-electron mobility transistor amplifiers and the cryogenic cooling requirements and strategy for meeting these requirements. For each of these technologies, we discuss the current technology readiness level and our strategy for advancing them to be ready for flight. We also describe the current system design, including the block diagram, and our estimate for the mass, power, and data rate of the instrument.
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X-ray hybrid CMOS detectors (HCDs) are a promising candidate for future x-ray missions requiring high throughput and fine angular resolution along with large field-of-view, such as the high-definition x-ray imager (HDXI) instrument on the Lynx x-ray surveyor mission concept. These devices offer fast readout capability, low power consumption, and radiation hardness while maintaining high detection efficiency from 0.2 to 10 keV. In addition, x-ray hybrid CMOS sensors may be fabricated with small pixel sizes to accommodate high-resolution optics and have shown great improvements in recent years in noise and spectral resolution performance. In particular, 12.5-μm pitch prototype devices that include in-pixel correlated double sampling capability and crosstalk eliminating capacitive transimpedance amplifiers, have been fabricated and tested. These detectors have achieved read noise as low as 5.4 e − , and we measure the best energy resolution to be 148 eV (2.5%) at 5.9 keV and 78 eV (14.9%) at 0.53 keV. We will describe the characterization of these prototype small-pixel x-ray HCDs, and we will discuss their applicability to the HDXI instrument on Lynx.
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Four NASA Science and Technology Definition Teams have been convened in order to develop and study four mission concepts to be evaluated by the upcoming 2020 Decadal Survey. The Lynx x-ray surveyor mission is one of these four large missions. Lynx will couple fine angular resolution (<0.5 arcsec HPD) x-ray optics with large effective area (∼2 m2 at 1 keV), thus enabling exploration within a unique scientific parameter space. One of the primary soft x-ray imaging instruments being baselined for this mission concept is the high-definition x-ray imager, HDXI. This instrument would use a finely pixelated silicon sensor array to achieve fine angular resolution imaging over a wide field of view (∼22 × 22 arcmin). Silicon sensors enable large-format/small-pixel devices, radiation tolerant designs, and high quantum efficiency across the entire soft x-ray bandpass. To fully exploit the large collecting area of Lynx (∼30 × Chandra), with negligible or minimal x-ray event pile-up, the HDXI will be capable of much faster frame rates than current x-ray imagers. We summarize the planned requirements, capabilities, and development status of the HDXI instrument, and associated papers in this special edition will provide further details on some specific detector options.
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The Lynx mission concept, under development ahead of the 2020 Astrophysics Decadal Review, includes the Lynx X-ray Microcalorimeter (LXM) as one of its primary instruments. The LXM uses a microcalorimeter array at the focus of a high-throughput soft x-ray telescope to enable high-resolution nondispersive spectroscopy in the soft x-ray waveband (0.2 to 15 keV) with exquisite angular resolution. Similar to other x-ray microcalorimeters, the LXM uses a set of blocking filters mounted within the dewar that pass the photons of interest (x-rays) while attenuating the out-of-band long-wavelength radiation. Such filters have been successfully used on previous orbital and suborbital instruments; however, the Lynx science objectives, which emphasize observations in the soft x-ray band (<1 keV), pose more challenging requirements on the set of LXM blocking filters. We present an introduction to the design of the LXM optical/IR blocking filters and discuss recent advances in filter capability targeted at LXM. In addition, we briefly describe the external filters and the modulated x-ray sources to be used for onboard detector calibration.
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Due to optical performance requirements, the primary mirror assembly must have the ability to be unaffected by environmental influences. These environmental influences include gravity, assembly error, and thermal change, by which external loads are imposed on the mirror. The external loads degrade the mirror surface accuracy and cause misalignment between mirrors. We describe a method to determine the allowable external loads. The performance of a flexure is evaluated by the transmitted loads to the mirror. The force acting on the mirror was analyzed under various conditions and the influence functions were obtained using inertia relief. With the knowledge of influence functions, the relationship between external loads and mirror surface distortion was built. According to the error budget of the primary mirror, the permissible loads required of the flexure were directly established. The optimization was achieved through optimizing the compliance of the flexure without mirror. With our method, the mirror design and flexure design are decoupled, and time and resources required for optimization are reduced. A parallel flexure is demonstrated for a 2-m lightweight, horizontally supported mirror.
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The free-vibration modes of an annular mirror (FVMAM), reflecting the natural properties of the physical phenomenon of resonance, are proposed to represent the optical aberrations. A realistic dynamics model is presented to investigate the physical properties of an annular mirror on the natural frequencies of FVMAM. An explicit solution is derived from the analytic method based on the thin plate theory. Taking the primary mirror of the 2.5-m-wide field survey telescope as an example, the FVMAM is numerically calculated and studied. The results have shown that the mode shapes resemble the optical aberrations, and there is almost a one-to-one match between each free-vibration mode and each optical aberration. In addition, the results of the analytic method are validated by the finite-element method. The conclusions suggest that the results obtained by the two methods are in good agreement with each other. Moreover, we present a comparative study for FVMAM and annular Zernike polynomials which are very well known to be widely used to represent optical aberrations. The results show that the free-vibration modes can not only be used to replace annular Zernike polynomials but also can be more effective.
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We describe a method for the measurement and alignment of reflector surfaces of radio telescopes with high precision. The scheme is based on antenna gain measurements under a series of active surface perturbations in terms of a set of orthogonal basis functions. Both local and global basis functions can be employed, resulting in different spatial resolution and different requirements on signal-to-noise ratio. Both theoretical studies and numerical simulations are presented, and demonstration experiments on a 1.2-m submillimeter antenna are reported. Practical considerations, including the effects of antenna mispointing and near field operation, are also discussed.
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TOPICS: Solar telescopes, Mirrors, Control systems, Solar processes, Telescopes, Observatories, Prototyping, Astronomical telescopes, Optical instrument design, Imaging systems
For a better understanding of small-scale solar activities, the Chinese Large Solar Telescope (CLST) with a 1.8-m aperture was proposed in 2011. As the first open solar telescope in China, it has some technical challenges that need to be addressed (e.g., thermal controlling for the primary mirror, cooling for the heat stop, system assembly, etc.). To support the design of CLST, a prototype of an open solar telescope (POST) with a 600-mm aperture was designed and fabricated from 2014 to 2017. A series of experiments for technical verifications were carried out based on the POST. The design, integration, and experiments done with the POST are reviewed. The solar observation results during its first commissioning phase are also presented.
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Several imaging x-ray telescope (IXT) prototypes have been fabricated independently by the Institute of Precision Optical Engineering, which employed thermal slumping technology. To verify the performance of the IXT prototypes, a three-layer prototype with a focal length of 2052.5 mm was tested using a narrow beam at the Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility. The performance testing posed a challenge due to the need to suppress the finite source distance effect on the IXT prototype (43-m long source-optic distance). In addition, limited use of motorized stages presents challenges. We present the experimental setups and detailed measurement approaches by utilizing limited measurement devices. The prototype is a segmented telescope comprising six sectors. For the best sector, the measured point spread function (PSF) yields a half power diameter (HPD) of 66″ and agrees well with modeling (62″) and the value measured at PANTER (65″). In addition, the integrated HPD of the whole prototype is 82″ obtained by coadding the PSFs of the six sectors.
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As part of a study funded by NASA headquarters, we are developing a probe-class mission concept called the Cosmic Evolution through UV Spectroscopy (CETUS). CETUS includes a 1.5-m aperture diameter telescope with a large field of view (FOV). CETUS includes three scientific instruments: a far ultraviolet (FUV) and near ultraviolet (NUV) imaging camera (CAM); a NUV multiobject spectrograph (MOS); and a dual-channel point/slit spectrograph (PSS) in the Lyman ultraviolet (LUV), FUV, and NUV spectral regions. The large FOV three-mirror anastigmatic (TMA) optical telescope assembly (OTA) simultaneously feeds the three separate scientific instruments. That is, the instruments view separate portions of the TMA image plane, enabling parallel operation by the three instruments. The field viewed by the MOS, whose design is based on an Offner-type spectrographic configuration to provide wide FOV correction, is actively configured to select and isolate numerous field sources using a next-generation micro-shutter array. The two-channel CAM design is also based on an Offner-like configuration. The PSS performs high spectral resolution spectroscopy on unresolved objects over the NUV region with spectral resolving power, R ∼ 40,000, in an echelle mode. The PSS also performs long-slit imaging spectroscopy at R ∼ 20,000 in the LUV and FUV spectral regions with two aberration-corrected, blazed, holographic gratings used in a Rowland-like configuration. The optical system also includes two fine guidance sensors, and wavefront sensors that sample numerous locations over the full OTA FOV. In-flight wavelength calibration is performed by a wavelength calibration system, and flat-fielding is also performed, both using in-flight calibration sources. We describe the current optical design of CETUS and the major trade studies leading to the design.
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We report on the extensively upgraded Cassegrain spectrograph on the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) 1.9-m telescope. The introduction of new collimator and camera optics, a new detector and controller, a rear-of-slit viewing camera to facilitate acquisition, and a new instrument control and quick-look data-reduction software (to take advantage of the entire system now being governed by a programmable logic controller) has revolutionized this workhorse instrument on Africa’s second largest optical telescope. The improvement in throughput over the previous incarnation of the spectrograph is ∼50 % in the red, increasing to a factor of four at the blue end. A selection of 10 surface-relief diffraction gratings is available to users, offering a variety of wavelength ranges and resolutions, with resolving powers between ∼500 and 6500. SpUpNIC (Spectrograph Upgrade: Newly Improved Cassegrain) has been scheduled for ∼80 % of the time available on the 1.9-m since being installed on the telescope in late October 2015, providing the single-object spectroscopic capability to support the broad research interests of the SAAO’s local and international user community. We present an assortment of data obtained for various observing programs to demonstrate different aspects of the instrument’s enhanced performance following this comprehensive upgrade.
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TOPICS: Polarization, Sensors, Signal detection, Solar concentrators, Polarimetry, Mirrors, Fourier transforms, Interferometry, Modulation, Monte Carlo methods
The Primordial Inflation Explorer (PIXIE) is an Explorer-class mission concept to measure the gravitational-wave signature of primordial inflation through its distinctive imprint on the linear polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Its optical system couples a polarizing Fourier transform spectrometer to the sky to measure the differential signal between orthogonal linear polarization states from two co-pointed beams on the sky. The double differential nature of the four-port measurement mitigates beam-related systematic errors common to the two-port systems used in most CMB measurements. Systematic errors coupling unpolarized temperature gradients to a false polarized signal cancel to first order for any individual detector. This common-mode cancellation is performed optically, prior to detection, and does not depend on the instrument calibration. Systematic errors coupling temperature to polarization cancel to second order when comparing signals from independent detectors. We describe the polarized beam patterns for PIXIE and assess the systematic error for measurements of CMB polarization.
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The expected yield of potentially Earth-like planets is a useful metric for designing future exoplanet-imaging missions. Recent yield studies of direct-imaging missions have focused primarily on yield methods and trade studies using “toy” models of missions. Here, we increase the fidelity of these calculations substantially, adopting more realistic exoplanet demographics as input, an improved target list, and a realistic distribution of exozodi levels. Most importantly, we define standardized inputs for instrument simulations, use these standards to directly compare the performance of realistic instrument designs, include the sensitivity of coronagraph contrast to stellar diameter, and adopt engineering-based throughputs and detector parameters. We apply these new high-fidelity yield models to study several critical design trades: monolithic versus segmented primary mirrors (PMs), on-axis versus off-axis secondary mirrors, and coronagraphs versus starshades. We show that as long as the gap size between segments is sufficiently small (<0.1 % of telescope diameter), there is no difference in yield for coronagraph-based missions with monolithic off-axis telescopes and segmented off-axis telescopes, assuming that the requisite engineering constraints imposed by the coronagraph can be met in both scenarios. We show that there is currently a factor of ∼2 yield penalty for coronagraph-based missions with on-axis telescopes compared to off-axis telescopes, and note that there is room for improvement in coronagraph designs for on-axis telescopes. We also reproduce previous results in higher fidelity, showing that the yields of coronagraph-based missions continue to increase with aperture size while the yields of starshade-based missions turnover at large apertures if refueling is not possible. Finally, we provide absolute yield numbers with uncertainties that include all major sources of astrophysical noise to guide future mission design.
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We investigated the geometrical characteristics of circular-aperture off-axis parabolic (OAP) mirror segments to clarify the meaning of the loosely defined word “center” used in the literature and in documents to describe OAPs. We proposed the elliptical aperture center of an OAP as the definition of the center. The off-axis distance (OAD) is the vertical distance from the reference optical axis to the aperture center. In addition, the OAD can be varied depending on the desired center of a circular aperture to select the part of a parallel beam for focusing. The radius of the circular aperture becomes the minor-axis semidiameter of the elliptical aperture of the OAP. These geometrical parameters were systematically defined, derived, and/or analyzed in the context of optical engineering applications. Based on a set of those fundamental parameters, an intrinsic datum point utilizing the deepest point on the OAP surface was presented. The datum point provides a well-defined reference co-ordinate frame for locating or aligning an OAP within various astronomical telescope designs, instrument manufacturing and assembly processes, and optical system alignment and testing applications.
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Aerodynamic analysis is a crucial part of evaluating dome seeing, which is one of the main factors affecting telescope image quality. Due to the large volume and high heat quantity inside the dome, dome seeing is a common issue. To characterize the thermodynamic performance of the 2.16-m telescope at the Xinglong Observatory, we describe computational fluid dynamic analyses for modeling the effects of passive ventilation as part of a preliminary study for a dome venting system. The aerodynamic modeling is built based on the structures of telescope and enclosure. In addition, the distribution of the temperature and the airflow around the enclosure are presented in several simulations with different slit orientations, including various wind–telescope relative azimuth angles. The airflow distribution was studied for two cases. The temperature and turbulent contour maps show that the current passive ventilation can cause turbulence and influence the accuracy of the image. The dome seeing is estimated using a postprocessing analysis based on the mechanical turbulence and temperature variations along the optical path. The results of dome seeing gave a suggestion of venting strategy.
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Imaging, Spectroscopic, High-Contrast, and Interferometric Instrumentation
Coronagraphy is a high-contrast imaging technique that aims to reduce the blinding glare of a star to detect a potential companion in its close environment. Vortex phase mask coronagraphy is widely recognized as one of the most promising approaches. The vortex optical demonstrator for coronagraphic application (VODCA) is a test bench currently developed at the University of Liège. Its main goal is to optically characterize infrared phase masks, in particular vortex masks. We detail the layout and salient features of VODCA and present the performance of the latest L-band (3575 to 4125 nm) and M-band (4600 to 5000 nm) annular groove phase masks (AGPMs) manufactured by our team. We obtain the highest rejection ratio ever measured for an AGPM at L-band: 3.2 × 103 in a narrowband filter (3425 to 3525 nm) and 2.4 × 103 in a broad L-band filter. By providing measurements close to the intrinsic limit of science-grade AGPMs, VODCA proves to be a step forward in terms of the evaluation of vortex phase masks performance.
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The large UV/optical/IR surveyor (LUVOIR) is a concept for a highly capable, multiwavelength space observatory with ambitious science goals. Finding and characterizing a wide range of exoplanets, including those that might be habitable, is a major goal of the study. The ambitious science goals drive the challenges of optical design. This paper will present how the optical design meets the unique challenges for coronagraphs on large telescopes to achieve high contrast for a wide wavelength range from 200 to 2000 nm. Some of these unique challenges include the position and size of occulter masks, deformable mirror placement and separation, tight tolerances on the optical system and each element, and finally, packaging all instruments in a limited space. Three types of modules are designed after the coronagraph to explore the exoplanets and analyze the spectrum of detected exoplanet signals: two imaging cameras, two integral field spectrographs, and one high-resolution spectrometer. All of them work together to provide information to meet scientific challenges in searching for habitable planets. The optical designs, unique challenges, and the solutions for all coronagraph and spectral modules are presented. Their specifications derived from science goals are also presented.
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The Planetary Imaging Concept Testbed Using a Recoverable Experiment - Coronagraph (PICTURE-C) mission will directly image debris disks and exozodiacal dust around nearby stars from a high-altitude balloon using a vector vortex coronagraph. One of the many starlight leakage sources that can degrade the performance of the coronagraph is polarization aberration induced by the reflective optical coatings. A polarization ray trace of the PICTURE-C telescope and coronagraph is combined with a physical optics wavefront propagation simulation to quantify the expected amount of coronagraph leakage due to polarization aberration. The simulations show the leakage is below the budgeted contrast of 1 × 10 − 8.
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The Juno Ultraviolet Spectrograph (Juno-UVS) is a remote-sensing science instrument onboard the Juno spacecraft that has been in polar orbit around Jupiter since July 2016. Juno-UVS measures photon events in the ultraviolet from 68 to 210 nm. It is primarily used to observe emission from the Jovian aurorae but is also sensitive to other sources, such as UV-bright stars, sky background Lyman-alpha emission, and reflected sunlight. However, Juno-UVS is also sensitive to the effects of penetrating high-energy radiation, which results in elevated count rates as measured by the instrument detector array. This radiation presents a challenge for efficiently planning the acquisition of mission science data, as data volume is a valuable (and finite) resource that can quickly be filled when the spacecraft periodically passes through regions of high radiation. This background radiation has been found to vary significantly on both short (spacecraft spin-modulated) timescales, as well as longer timescales from minutes to hours during each close approach to Jupiter. This variability has required a multipronged approach in the operation planning of hardware (such as, dynamic instrument voltage adjustment) as well as onboard software (such as, utilizing data quality factors for the selective storage of science data). We present an overview of these current mitigation/optimization techniques and planning strategies used for this instrument, which will likely also be useful for the development and operations of future instruments within high radiation space environments (e.g., the ESA JUICE mission or NASA’s Europa Clipper).
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Data and Instrumentation Analysis Techniques and Methods
We describe the results of principal component analysis (PCA) of up-the-ramp sampled infrared (IR) array data from the Hubble Space Telescope wide field camera 3 (WFC3 IR), James Webb Space Telescope NIRSpec, and prototype Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope’s wide field instrument detectors. These systems use, respectively, Teledyne H1R, H2RG, and H4RG-10 near-IR detector arrays with a variety of IR array controllers. The PCA shows that the Legendre polynomials approximate the principal components of these systems (i.e., they roughly diagonalize the covariance matrix). In contrast to the monomial basis that is widely used for polynomial fitting and linearization today, the Legendre polynomials are an orthonormal basis. They provide a quantifiable, compact, and (nearly) linearly uncorrelated representation of the information content of the data. By fitting a few Legendre polynomials, nearly all of the meaningful information in representative WFC3 astronomical datacubes can be condensed from 15 up-the-ramp samples down to 6 compressible Legendre coefficients per pixel. The higher order coefficients contain time domain information that is lost when one projects up-the-ramp sampled datacubes onto two-dimensional images by fitting a straight line, even if the data are linearized before fitting the line. Going forward, we believe that this time domain information is potentially important for disentangling the various nonlinearities that can affect IR array observations, i.e., inherent pixel nonlinearity, persistence, burn in, brighter-fatter effect, (potentially) nonlinear interpixel capacitance, and perhaps others.
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We present a characterization of CasPol, a dual-beam polarimeter mounted at the 2.15-m Jorge Sahade Telescope, located at the Complejo Astronómico El Leoncito, Argentina. The telescope is one of the few available meter-sized optical telescopes located in the southern hemisphere hosting a polarimeter. To carry out this work, we collected photopolarimetric data along five observing campaigns, the first one during January 2014, and the remaining ones spread between August 2017 and March 2018. The data were taken through the Johnson–Cousins V, R, and I filters. Along the campaigns, we observed eight unpolarized and four polarized standard stars. Our analysis began characterizing the impact of seeing and aperture into the polarimetric measurements, defining an optimum aperture extraction and setting a clear limit for seeing conditions. Then, we used the unpolarized standard stars to characterize the level of instrumental polarization and to assess the presence of polarization dependent on the position across the charge-coupled device. Polarized standard stars were investigated to quantify the stability of the instrument with wavelength. Specifically, we find that the overall instrumental polarization of CasPol is ∼0.2 % in the V, R, and I bands, with a negligible polarization dependence on the position of the stars on the detector. The stability of the half-wave plate retarder is about 0.35 deg, making CasPol comparable to already existing instruments. We also provide measurements in the three photometric bands for both the unpolarized and polarized standard stars. Finally, we show scientific results, illustrating the capabilities of CasPol for precision polarimetry of relatively faint objects.
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By measuring the centroid of a beam on a detector, one can track the movement of that beam across the detector. By tracking this movement, one can track the object encompassing the detector, for example, a spacecraft. A variety of system-specific performance inhibitors can make this a challenge, requiring a robust calibration method. The goal of this investigation is to model the true beam position of the instrument in terms of the measured beam position. For this, a mathematical model is created that interpolates and corrects the measured beam position using precollected position data—a “calibration model.” The real-world scenario for this investigation is the flight-representative model of the fine lateral and longitudinal sensor (FLLS) instrument, built by Neptec Design Group and Neptec UK for the European Space Agency mission PROBA-3. Performance inhibitors for FLLS are cropping of the beam, imperfect optics, and a varying distance the beam has traveled (up to 250 m). Using bivariate spline interpolation for the FLLS calibration model gives the best performance, achieving a measurement accuracy well within the mission requirement of <300 μm.
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The Echelle spectrograph operating at Vainu Bappu Telescope is a general purpose instrument designed for high-resolution spectroscopy. It is being considered for precision Doppler measurements without altering the existing design and basic usage. However, the design level limitations and environmental perturbations are a major source of instability and systematic errors. As a result, a small Doppler signal in the stellar spectra is completely swamped by the large and uncontrolled instrumental drift. We discuss some of the remedial measures we took to improve the radial velocity performance of the spectrograph. We show that an autoguider assembly has greatly reduced the mechanical jitter of the star image at the fiber input, making the illumination of the spectrograph slit at the other end stable. We have also installed an iodine absorption cell to track and eliminate the instrumental drifts to facilitate precision radial velocity observations. Furthermore, we have developed a generic algorithm that uses iodine exposures to extract the stellar radial velocities without the need for the complex forward modeling. Our algorithm is not accurate to the level of traditional iodine technique. However, it is convenient to use on a low-cost general-purpose spectrograph targeting a moderate radial velocity (RV) precision at a few 10 to 100 ms − 1 level. Finally, we have demonstrated the usefulness of our approach by measuring the RV signal of a well-known short-period, planet-hosting star.
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Wavefront Sensing, Active and Adaptive Optics, and Control Systems
The aberration fields of misaligned on-axis telescopes can be described by nodal aberration theory. However, traditional nodal aberration theory cannot directly apply to pupil-offset off-axis systems. In our previous work, the net aberration fields of pupil-offset off-axis two-mirror astronomical telescopes induced by lateral misalignments were investigated by extending nodal aberration theory to include pupil-offset off-axis telescopes with a system-level pupil coordinate transformation through simulation. An experimental study on the net aberration fields of pupil-offset off-axis three-mirror anastigmatic (TMA) telescopes induced by lateral misalignments is further presented. Specifically, the astigmatism and coma aberration fields as well as their inherent relations are analytically expressed, simulated, and quantitatively validated with a real pupil-offset off-axis TMA telescope. Meanwhile, the differences between the aberration fields of misaligned off-axis and on-axis TMA telescopes are revealed and explicated. Our work not only contributes to a deep understanding of the net aberration fields of pupil-offset off-axis TMA telescopes induced by lateral misalignments but also represent an important validation for the extension of nodal aberration theory to pupil-offset off-axis telescopes.
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Adaptive optics (AO) is widely used in optical/near-infrared telescopes to remove the effects of atmospheric distortion, and laser guide stars (LGSs) are commonly used to ease the requirement for a bright, natural reference source close to the scientific target in an AO system. However, focus anisoplanatism renders single LGS AO useless for the next generation of extremely large telescopes. Here, we describe proof-of-concept experimental demonstrations of a LGS alternative configuration, which is free of focus anisoplanatism, with the corresponding wavefront sensing and reconstruction method, termed projected pupil plane pattern (PPPP). This laboratory experiment is a critical milestone between the simulation and on-sky experiment, for demonstrating the feasibility of PPPP technique and understanding technical details, such as extracting the signal and calibrating the system. Three major processes of PPPP are included in this laboratory experiment: the upward propagation, return path, and reconstruction process. From the experimental results, it has been confirmed that the PPPP signal is generated during the upward propagation and the return path is a reimaging process whose effect can be neglected (if the images of the backscattered patterns are binned to a certain size). Two calibration methods are used: the theoretical calibration is used for the wavefront measurement, and the measured calibration is used for closed-loop control. From both the wavefront measurement and closed-loop results, we show that PPPP achieves equivalent performance to a Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor.
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