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Phase A Design
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Phase A Design Study

The proposed telescope has a 10 meter diameter clear aperture, and provides a diffraction-limited field-of-view at least 30 resolution elements across at wavelengths between 200 and 1000 microns. All optical elements are offset to minimize reflected power and thereby prevent the creation of weak resonant cavities between the optics and the receivers. The primary mirror consists of passively-mounted aluminum panels on a carbon-fiber reinforced polymer truss. The truss is homologous, in the sense that gravitational deflections in the primary mirror and primary mirror mount cause distortion into a series of parabolic shapes with different pointings and focal lengths: these changes will be accommodated by active repositioning of the secondary mirror. The secondary support, consisting of a large enclosed beam permits the mounting of either a standard set of gregorian optics, or prime focus instrumentation packages.

A tertiary chopper is located at the exit pupil of the instrument, in a design similar to that used successfully on the AST/RO telescope (Stark et al. 1997a). The tertiary chopper can be repositioned to direct the beam to a prime-focus CMB package similar to that used on the VIPER telescope. The telescope will allow the mounting of large prime focus instrument packages for CMB, and the mounting of large (100 element) array receivers in a non-tilting Nasmyth cabin. All mechanical systems are enclosed to protect them from the elements. Waste heat from compressors and motors will be ducted inside this enclosure.

The alidade, or yoke structure consists primarily of closed steel truss structure enclosing the elevation drive ball screw and the two azimuth drive motors. The yoke mounts atop a 3-meter diameter 4-point angular contact bearing and drive gear assembly. The enclosure ensures that the waste heat produced by the receiver compressors can be effectively used to maintain the telescope structure at a constant, relatively warm temperature. The Nasmyth focus receiver cabin mounts directly to the side of the yoke, in line with the elevation axis.

[3/4 View of 10 m.] [Top View of 10 m.]
[Side View of 10 m.] [Back View of 10 m.]
Click images for Acrobat Files of  SPST Computer Model

Primary Mirror Deflection Analysis

 

An important property of this antenna design is homology, that is, the tendency for gravity-induced primary mirror surface deflections to act as a focus shift. Simply stated the deflections must be parabolic and predictable, permitting their effect to be removed by a pre-calculated re-positioning of the secondary mirror. Homologous primary mirror design is a particularly effective technique for a South Pole telescope, because gravitation rather than wind or temperature change is the dominant cause of structural deflections in the weather conditions prevalent at Pole (cf. Chamberlin, Lane and Stark 1997). We have made a preliminary structural analysis of the baseline primary mirror design. This includes the panels, back-up structure, steel support, secondary, and mounting arrangement. For the preliminary analysis, a single-sized structural component was used throughout the reflector back-up truss. The analysis shows that the deflection in the primary resulting from a pointing change from zenith to an elevation angle of 50 degrees follows a parabola to within 26 microns, or 16 micron RMS, with an absolute maximum deflection of 860 microns. This is surprisingly good, considering that the preliminary design has equal-stiffness truss elements and has not yet been optimized in any way. We are therefore confident that the 10 meter primary can be designed to be diffraction-limited at 200 microns wavelength for elevations between 90 and 50 degrees. The next step in the design is to iteratively modify the stiffness of the carbon fiber truss rods, in order to improve the homology.

During the early phases of the antenna design we will consider various primary mirror support arrangements, examining the effects of the placement of the elevation axis and the ball screw attachment point. During this study we will also perform a detailed analysis of truss structure elements, optimizing the primary structural response, further reducing the primary mirror deflections, while improving the homology. A dynamical analysis of the primary mirror will consider the excitation of deflection modes by wind and by the drive system.

 

Telescope Design Parameters

Optical Performance       : Diffraction limited at 200 microns wavelength
field of view             : 10 pixels on a side at Nasmyth focus
Tracking                  : 1 arcsec maximum error in winds of 10 m/s or less
Slew speed                : 0.5 rpm in winds of 30 m/s or less
primary mirror homology   : < 20 micron RMS deviation from defined surface
                             for elevations between 90 and 50 degrees
                             (this specification will be improved in sage 1
                              design study)
primary aperture          : 10000 mm
equation of primary       : z = ( x^2 + y^2 ) / (4 * 7000 mm)
                            (will be modified to shaped figure)
center of primary         : (5300mm, 0, 1003.214 mm)
focus of primary          : (0,0,7000 mm)
primary mirror materials  : cast aluminum panels supported by carbon-fiber 
                                reinforced polymer truss and Invar nodes.
panel area                : approximately 0.75 square meters
length along central ray from center of primary to center of
         secondary        : 8403.375 mm

center of secondary       : (-265,0,7299.839)
first focus of secondary  : (0,0,7000 mm)
second focus of secondary : (-11.16738,0,-699.348)
diameter of secondary     :  700 mm
magnification of secondary: -20
secondary materials       : cast aluminum single panel
secondary mirror mount    : actively-controlled hexapod

center of tertiary        : (-251.616, 0, 6878.052)
chopping tertiary         : zero momentum chopper based on Dynaserv positioner

elevation drive system    : ball screw drive
azimuth drive system      : opposed torque pinions on bull gear
azimuth bearing           : fully-constrained gothic-arch with integral gear
encoder precision         : 23 bits

drive system electronics  : VME/VXI bus system with PMAC controllers

detector focal points     : prime focus (for CMBR), gregorian, Nasmyth
Nasmyth cabin size        : 4 m x 4 m x 3 m

guide telescope           : CCD camera at focus of 75 mm diameter f/9 lens

 

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Last modified: April 22, 2000