Impact of large field angles on the requirements for deformable mirror in imaging satellites
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Authors
Kim, Jae Jun
Mueller, Mark
Martinez, Ty
Agrawal, Brij
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Second Readers
Subjects
Adaptive optic
Deformable mirror
Wide field-of-view
Imaging satellites
Deformable mirror
Wide field-of-view
Imaging satellites
Date of Issue
2018-01
Date
2018-01
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Abstract
For certain imaging satellite missions, a large aperture with wide field-of-view is needed. In order to achieve diffraction limited performance, the mirror surface Root Mean Square (RMS) error has to be less than 0.05 waves. In the case of visible light, it has to be less than 30 nm. This requirement is difficult to meet as the large aperture will need to be segmented in order to fit inside a launch vehicle shroud. To reduce this requirement and to compensate for the residual wavefront error, Micro-Electro-Mechanical System (MEMS) deformable mirrors can be considered in the aft optics of the optical system. MEMS deformable mirrors are affordable and consume low power, but are small in size. Due to the major reduction in pupil size for the deformable mirror, the effective field angle is magnified by the diameter ratio of the primary and deformable mirror. For wide field of view imaging, the required deformable mirror correction is field angle dependant, impacting the required parameters of a deformable mirror such as size, number of actuators, and actuator stroke. In this paper, a representative telescope and deformable mirror system model is developed and the deformable mirror correction is simulated to study the impact of the large field angles in correcting a wavefront error using a deformable mirror in the aft optics.
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The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/0.1016/j.actaastro.2018.01.001
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This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
