Paper
22 July 2016 Smart telescope for astronomy
Manuele Moschetti, Marco Riva, Matteo Aliverti, Giorgio Pariani, Giuseppe Sala
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In this paper, we present the preliminary design of a smart telescope, i.e. an optomechanical device whose structure is able to monitor external loads (gravity, wind, thermal gradients, displacements caused by earthquake) and actively adapt to them in order to correct misalignments. To obtain that, the final solution will foresee the use of smart materials, or rather integrated smart structures containing sensors (such as fibre optics), and actuators (shape memory alloys or piezoelectric). Starting from the optical design, where the primary mirror is supposed to be in the class of 60cm diameter, with this work we illustrate the mechanical design philosophy. The basic idea is to conceive of a "low-performance" telescope from the stability point of view, in order to emphasize the environmental loads contributions, show that it is possible to correct them a posteriori, and generalize the results for more optimized structures (Serrurier-like). Therefore, it is shown the finite element model of a first naked version of the telescope (without smart structures), useful to know the displacements caused by predictable loads. In this first design phase, the secondary mirror re-centering is taken into account as a study case: to achieve the goal, Macro Fibre Composite piezoelectric actuators have been selected.
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Manuele Moschetti, Marco Riva, Matteo Aliverti, Giorgio Pariani, and Giuseppe Sala "Smart telescope for astronomy", Proc. SPIE 9912, Advances in Optical and Mechanical Technologies for Telescopes and Instrumentation II, 99123H (22 July 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2232992
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KEYWORDS
Actuators

Telescopes

Mirrors

Smart structures

Microsoft Foundation Class Library

Finite element methods

Optical components

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