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I.INTRODUCTIONThe current generation of terrestrial telescopes has large enough primary mirror diameters that active optical control based on wavefront sensing is necessary. Similarly, in space, while the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) has a mostly passive optical design, apart from focus control, its successor the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has active control of many degrees of freedom in its primary and secondary mirrors. JWST’s wavefront sensing and control (WFS&C) system will have to set the telescope into its alignment state after the deployment and maintain that alignment for the lifetime of the mission [1]. The wavefront sensing and control technologies chosen for the JWST have been substantially tested in simulation and experimentally. For that purpose, Ball Aerospace built a 1:6 scale mock up of JWST: The Testbed Telescope (TBT), which was used to achieve the necessary demonstrations of technology readiness in preparation for JWST [2,3]. But WFS&C development remains an ongoing process, with novel algorithms arising that may provide increased efficiency [4], useful contingency capabilities for JWST [5], aid in its long term optical maintenance [6], and may be valuable for future even larger segmented space telescopes [7]. Developing the JWST Optical Simulation Testbed (JOST) at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) provides a platform to test and evaluate new algorithms for WFS&C, with possible applications to JWST or to future missions such as the proposed Large UV/Optical/IR Surveyor (LUVOIR). Moreover, this testbed will be helpful to develop staff expertise for JWST commissioning and operations reproducing various steps of the alignment. It is a supplement to existing verification and validation activities for independent cross-checks and novel experiments, not a part of the mission’s critical path development process. JOST is a simplified model of JWST, not an exact scaled model as in the case of the TBT. But it provides a close enough physical model so that the key optical aspects remain the same, especially for the degrees of freedom which are most relevant for maintenance over the life of JWST such as segment tilts and misalignments of the secondary relative to the primary. To meet that requirement, JOST is a three-lens anastigmat, a refractive analogue to JWST’s three mirror anastigmat. A lens and aperture stop define JOST’s entrance pupil, with segmentation provided by a segmented deformable mirror conjugated with that pupil (in the re-imaged pupil plane equivalent to where JWST’s Fine Steering Mirror is located). JOST is designed to achieve similar quality image and image sampling as JWST at 2 microns (> 80% Strehl ratio, and Nyquist sampled) over a field equivalent to the NIRCam module, but at 633 nm wavelength. This paper presents the first experimental results of the WFS&C on the testbed. Our group presented a general overview of JOST in Perrin et al. [8] “James Webb Space Telescope Optical Simulation Testbed I: Overview and First Results”, hereafter Paper I. Its detailed optical design and several trade studies were presented in Choquet et al.[9] “James Webb Space Telescope Optical Simulation Testbed II. Design of a Three-Lens Anastigmat Telescope Simulator”, hereafter Paper II. The experimental implementation of the WFS&C on the testbed is described in Egron et al. [10] “James Webb Space Telescope Optical Simulation Testbed III: First experimental results with linear-control alignment”, hereafter Paper III. Recent work has focused on the overall alignment of the lenses, with the segmented deformable mirror (DM) not included in the optical path, to allow test and development of the testbed’s software infrastructure for multifield wavefront sensing and linear control using a full circular pupil rather than a segmented and hexagonal one. The segmented DM control software has been developed separately, and the segmented DM will be readded to JOST once the linear control infrastructure has been validated for alignment of the three lenses based on multi-field sensing. We emphasize that one of the unique aspects of JOST is its ability to model arbitrary 5-degree-of-freedom misalignments of the primary, secondary, and tertiary lens with respect to one another, which can result in field-dependent wavefront errors that may not be sensed on a single field point in some cases. In §2, we will focus on the optical simulation and the motorization of the testbed. In §3, we describe the implementation of wavefront control (WFC) algorithm on JOST. In §4, we present the first results of the linear control of L2, integrating WFS&C. II.Testbed descriptionA.Optical simulationThe optical simulation of JOST is done with the Zemax Optic Studio 2016 software. As an example, this software produced the layout of the optical design presented on Fig. 1. For more detailed explanations about the optical design and the trade studies, see Paper II. Including all the optical components of the testbed in the simulation gives us the possibility to analyze some vignetting effects, or the sensitivity of the off-axis parabola position on the alignment process. B.Motorization of JOSTSince the purpose of JOST is to simulate the alignment of the primary and the secondary mirrors of JWST, motorized actuators are set to control the segmented mirror and the second lens of JOST:
In addition, to make the automation of the testbed possible, the two axes (tip, tilt) of the steering mirror are motorized as well. Finally, since the WFS of JOST is handled by phase diversity algorithms, a translation stage allows the movement of the camera. The stepper actuators and the camera are controlled by software in Python. C.Wavefront sensing for JOSTOur phase diversity software has been provided by ONERA. It is using a Maximum A Posterior estimator [11], [12] to extract the phase information from focus-diverse imagery. This estimator integrates a regularization on the aberrations based on Bayesian interpretation. We have experimentally tested the WFS methods, and validated the WFC algorithms compared to simulation in paper III. III.Optical control modelGiven the linearity properties of the optical design of JOST, we justify and develop the linear control model used for JOST. A.Problem StatementThe optical control model consists in finding a relation between the wavefront observed and the alignment state of the testbed. To do so, we neglect the optical path change when a misalignment occurs. This is acceptable because, for JOST, the aberrations induced by the misalignments are lower than 300 nm rms. In this regime, the remaining aberrations of the system can be computed by summing the different phase maps representing the aberrations induced by each degree of freedom of L2. We can then define the wavefront as a function of the lens positions: Where ϕ(θ) is the wavefront of the system for an angular position θ, ϕ(θ0) is the wavefront of the system with L2 aligned (also called residual wavefront). is the aberration induced by the misalignment of L2 along the degree of freedom i by the amount j for an angular position θ. We call the influence function for degree of freedom i and the angular position θ. z, x, y, α, β define the position of L2, they are equal to 0 when L2 is aligned. The pupil of the system being a full circular aperture, we can project the wavefront observed onto the Zernike polynomial basis. We can constrain the resolution of equation (1) choosing different angular positions θ and different Zernike polynomials to project the wavefront on. Each of these projections is a sensing mode. In the next part we look for sensing modes (the angular positions and Zernike polynomials) for which the projection of the functions are linear. B.Jacobian matrix of the systemIn the case of JOST, we can either compute the influence functions in simulation (using the software Zemax), or experimentally, moving L2 by small steps and measuring the wavefront each time. Fig.2 shows the comparison of the simulated and experimental influence functions and . They are projected only on the polynomials Z4 (defocus), Z5 (oblique astigmatism), Z6 (vertical astigmatism), Z7 (vertical coma), Z8 (horizontal coma). The contribution of other modes is very low and therefore too sensitive to the noise to be used as control modes. The plots in Fig.2 show that and projected on Z5, Z7 and Z8, are linear functions. Following the same process we have shown that this result is also true for the functions , and . The projection of on Z5 can be expressed as follow: The linear control requires all the sensing modes chosen to be associated to linear influence functions [13,14]. In that case, (Eq. 1) is a system of linear equations that can be written as: Where ϕ and ϕ0 are respectively the measured and the residual wavefront vectors. Their coefficients are the values of the system sensing modes. J is the interaction matrix of the system, also called the Jacobian matrix. Each line of the Jacobian matrix is related to a sensing mode Zi(θ), calculated as follow: Where ΔZi(θ) corresponds to the Zernike i variation for a misalignment Δz, Δx, Δy, Δα or Δβ. The principle of the linear control is to invert the Jacobian matrix [17], the misalignment of L2 is calculated as follow [16]: The least square approach of the problem consists in computing the generalized inverse of the matrix J. To do so, we use the singular value decomposition (SVD) [18][,19],[20] of J. We build J line by line choosing the sensing modes as uncorrelated as possible. The following set of sensing modes is used to experimentally test the linear control code (the results are shown in the next part): III.Experimental results of the linear control alignmentIn this part, we test our linear control algorithm on the JOST testbed randomly misaligning L2. We illustrate this paper giving the example of L2 misaligned as follow: +1.3 mm shift along X axis, -0.8mm shift along Y axis, +0.3mm shift along Z axis, +2° rotation Y axis, rotation around -1° X axis. The alignment correction of testbed is fully automated, this allow us to iterate 3 times for a better correction. Results regarding wavefront quality improvement are shown in Fig.3, the L2 shifts and rotations at the different iterations are shown in Fig.4. The sensing modes choice is detailed in §3. In Fig.4, the plots are converging to the value 0, which means that at each step of the linear control loop, the position of L2 is getting closer to its aligned state. At the same time, the testbed wavefront quality improves and reaches less than 20 nm rms across the field of view at the end. We can point out that a second iteration is needed to improve the alignment correction because the system is not perfectly linear, we could also investigate on the validity of the very first assumption to neglect the optical path change when such large misalignments occur. We can conclude that thanks to the automated linear control infrastructure implemented on JOST, the position of L2 can been successfully corrected from random misalignments. IV.ConclusionWe have achieved the full automation of the JOST testbed, including control of the hardware, data acquisition, calibration, processing for wavefront sensing through focus-diverse phase retrieval, and wavefront control via a linear model. We use Python for high level scripting, and interface from Python to Zemax via Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE) for simulation. Fig. 5 gives an overview of the linear control infrastructure developed for JOST. The three lenses were initially aligned in x,y and tip-tilt using an alignment telescope, leaving unkown their alignment state along the optical axis. To finalize the alignment of the lenses along the optical axis, we have used a linear control model, similar to the one described above but for these specific control modes. Because only the second lens (secondary mirror surrogate) is motorized, this required tedious manual iterations, and we define our best current state of alignment as our alignment baseline. We have developed and experimentally validated the linear control infrastructure on the control of L2. We are now about to include the segmented mirror on the testbed for subsequent demonstrations of multi-field control with a segmented telescope. This is a unique aspect of JOST; many other lab wavefront control testbeds are optimized for a single field point (e.g. high contrast AO) or at most for multi-conjugate AO correction of a field about an arcminute across, and often just use DM surface figures to correct wavefront errors. JOST provides a test framework for optical alignment demonstrations for wide-field space telescopes, which requires active control of mirror positions and orientations in three dimensional space. The linear control model presented here is directly analogous to the basic strategy proposed for the Multi-Field, Multi-Instrument (MIMF) stage of JWST commissioning. STScI staff will be collaborating with Ball Aerospace and NASA Goddard personnel to execute that stage of commissioning, and JOST provides one venue for gaining additional expertise in preparation for that, alongside the ongoing optical test campaign and rehearsals using software such as Ball’s Integrated Telescope Model. In the longer run, there may be more use of JOST to build further confidence in various contingency cases or alternate algorithms, for instance tests to validate the use of non-redundant segment tilts as a backup cophasing strategy. Also, JOST will provide a training platform over years ahead as new staff members rotate onto the telescope team responsible for JWST’s continued alignment. The state of the art in wavefront sensing techniques will surely continue to evolve during the perhaps decade-long lifetime of JWST. JOST’s flexibility as a general purpose wavefront sensing testbed will allow it to address a wide range of questions or test relevant improved algorithms as needed. This could also include segment phasing strategies for future space missions with larger numbers of segments. The development of such missions, such as the proposed LUVOIR, will be the work of many years. 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