Paper
15 July 2010 Contactless thin adaptive mirror technology: past, present, and future
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The contactless, voice coil motor adaptive mirror technology starts from an idea by Piero Salinari in 1993. This idea has progressively evolved to real systems thanks to a fruitful collaboration involving Italian research institutes (INAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri and Aerospace Department of Politecnico di Milano) and small Italian enterprises (Microgate and ADS). Collaboration between research institutions and industry is still very effectively in place, but nowadays the technology has left the initial R&D phase reaching a stage in which the whole projects are managed by the industrial entities. In this paper we present the baseline concept and its evolution, describing the main progress milestones. These are paced by the actual implementation of this idea into real systems, from MMT, to LBT, Magellan, VLT, GMT and E-ELT. The fundamental concept and layout has remained unchanged through this evolution, maintaining its intrinsic advantages: tolerance to actuators' failures, mechanical de-coupling and relaxed tolerances between correcting mirror and reference structure, large stroke, hysteresis-free behavior. Moreover, this concept has proved its expandability to very large systems with thousands of controlled d.o.f. Notwithstanding the solidity of the fundamentals, the implementation has strongly evolved from the beginning, in order to deal with the dimensional, power, maintainability and reliability constraints imposed by the increased size of the targeted systems.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Roberto Biasi, Daniele Gallieni, Piero Salinari, Armando Riccardi, and Paolo Mantegazza "Contactless thin adaptive mirror technology: past, present, and future", Proc. SPIE 7736, Adaptive Optics Systems II, 77362B (15 July 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.858816
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Cited by 17 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Actuators

Mirrors

Control systems

Digital signal processing

Telescopes

Sensors

Prototyping

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