Annonce
From mirror petals to laser stars: ELT adaptive optics milestones reached
6 octobre 2021
The largest adaptive mirror ever built, the M4 mirror for ESO’s upcoming Extremely Large Telescope (ELT), has reached an important milestone in its development: all six petal-shaped segments that make up the mirror are now completed.
M4, the fourth mirror in the light path of the telescope, can change shape quickly and very precisely, and is a key part of the ELT’s adaptive optics system. Light from cosmic objects is distorted by our planet’s atmosphere, producing blurred images. To correct for these distortions, the ELT will use advanced adaptive-optics hardware and software, some of which has been specially developed for the telescope. This includes powerful lasers that create artificial reference stars when there aren’t stars bright enough close to the object of interest to allow measurements of atmospheric distortions, and fast and accurate sensing cameras that measure these distortions. The measurements are then passed to extremely fast real-time computers that can calculate the necessary shape corrections to be applied to M4. In addition to the completion of the M4 petals, these systems have also all recently achieved key milestones.
Thanks to its adaptive-optics system, ESO’s ELT will deliver images sharper than those taken by current and future telescopes in space, like the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope.
Final petal of M4 adaptive mirror delivered
With a diameter of 2.4 metres, M4 is the largest deformable mirror ever made and one of the most challenging and exciting components of what will be the largest visible and infrared telescope in the world. It is made up of six ultra-thin segments, the last two of which have now been finalised.
The six petals of M4 are made from Zerodur©, a special glass-ceramic material manufactured by SCHOTT in Germany. The French company Safran Reosc began polishing the M4 petals in 2017, turning each 35 mm-thin sheet of Zerodur© into a flexible segment less than 2-mm thick. All petals were checked by ESO engineers before being sent to Italian company AdOptica, who received the final one just a few months ago.
During the final production stages AdOptica have applied a coating to the mirror’s back surface and put in place lateral supports to connect the petals to the M4 mechanical structure. In addition, the companies’ technicians have glued more than 5000 magnets onto the mirror’s back surface, which play a role in deforming the flexible segments of M4, making adjustments 1000 times per second to an accuracy of 50 nanometers — as small as the tiniest viruses.
Now Safran Reosc is working to produce an identical set of petals, bringing the total number to 12. These will serve as spares and will be swapped out with the original six petals when they require recoating after a few years of use, minimising disruption to telescope observing time.
M4 reference body progressing
Because the M4 petals are so thin and need to be deformed to incredible accuracy, they require a very stable structure to support them: a reference body with attached magnets that support the mirror and adjust its shape. This reference structure is made by French company Mersen from Boostec® silicon carbide, one of the stiffest light materials available, and then polished by Belgian company AMOS, who are in the final stages of this process.
Getting the reference body to its final shape is extremely challenging. AMOS aims to get the structure flat to an accuracy of 5 microns, which has been made difficult by the fact that its surface has many holes to fit the M4 actuators.
Once the reference body is finished and delivered, AdOptica can begin the lengthy process of integrating the complete M4 unit, the structure comprising the mirror, its reference body and all support and connection elements. AdOptica is expected to do the first tests on the fully integrated M4 mirror in the final quarter of 2022.
Guide star laser accepted
One of the most visible components of the ELT’s adaptive optics systems will be its “laser guide star system” consisting of 6 lasers generating artificial guide stars in the upper atmosphere. To measure the distortions caused by the Earth’s atmosphere, the ELT’s adaptive optics system requires bright stars close to the object of study. Because these stars are not always conveniently placed, the ELT’s laser systems will allow astronomers to create artificial stars anywhere in the sky that is required, by exciting sodium atoms located at around 90km altitude in the atmosphere.
The first laser source for ESO’s ELT was finished by German company TOPTICA Projects in May 2021 and was delivered to ESO where it has now completed acceptance tests.
Progress for sensing cameras and ultra-fast computers
Another essential component of ESO’s ELT adaptive optics system are the so-called wavefront sensing cameras, which act as the “eyes” of the telescope by sensing the light from guide stars. ESO’s ELT will be equipped with three complementary types of wavefront sensing cameras, each with a distinct image sensor or detector, which will be used both by the telescope itself and by the science instruments.
These cameras are considered so critical for the functioning of the ELT adaptive optics that ESO has decided to do much of the work in-house. Two types of cameras, called ALICE and LISA, are designed at ESO while the third camera type, FREDA, is an adaptation of a commercially available camera (C-RED One) made by the French company First Light Imaging and modified to ELT standards by ESO engineers. In addition, ESO has developed, in collaboration with international company Teledyne, the detector for LISA, which will be ready for production by the end of this year. The design and prototyping activities for all three cameras should be completed next year.
Special computers on the ELT, called adaptive optics real-time computers, will then use the signals from the cameras to calculate how mirrors like M4 need to be deformed to correct for distortions caused by turbulence in the Earth’s atmosphere. A prototype computer developed at ESO has recently shown it can receive data from camera sensors and transmit it to the actuators that deform the mirror in just a few hundreds of microseconds.
While we are still a few years away from seeing the ELT’s complex adaptive optics systems completed, these recent advances show that significant progress is being made towards the scientific first light set for 2027. Once in operation, ESO’s ELT will dramatically change what we know about our Universe and will make us rethink our place in the cosmos.
Liens
Contacts
Elise Vernet
Responsible for M4 Unit at ESO
Garching bei München, Germany
Email: evernet@eso.org
Steffan Lewis
ELT Optical Control Project Manager at ESO
European Southern Observatory
Garching bei München, Germany
Email: slewis@eso.org
Enrico Marchetti
Wave Front Sensor Camera Development Project Manager at ESO
Garching bei München, Germany
Email: emarchet@eso.org
Nick Kornweibel
ELT Control System Project Manager at ESO
Garching bei München, Germany
Email: nkornwei@eso.org
Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6670
Email: press@eso.org
À propos de l'annonce
Identification: | ann21014 |
Our use of Cookies
We use cookies that are essential for accessing our websites and using our services. We also use cookies to analyse, measure and improve our websites’ performance, to enable content sharing via social media and to display media content hosted on third-party platforms.
ESO Cookies Policy
The European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere (ESO) is the pre-eminent intergovernmental science and technology organisation in astronomy. It carries out an ambitious programme focused on the design, construction and operation of powerful ground-based observing facilities for astronomy.
This Cookies Policy is intended to provide clarity by outlining the cookies used on the ESO public websites, their functions, the options you have for controlling them, and the ways you can contact us for additional details.
What are cookies?
Cookies are small pieces of data stored on your device by websites you visit. They serve various purposes, such as remembering login credentials and preferences and enhance your browsing experience.
Categories of cookies we use
Essential cookies (always active): These cookies are strictly necessary for the proper functioning of our website. Without these cookies, the website cannot operate correctly, and certain services, such as logging in or accessing secure areas, may not be available; because they are essential for the website’s operation, they cannot be disabled.
Functional Cookies: These cookies enhance your browsing experience by enabling additional features and personalization, such as remembering your preferences and settings. While not strictly necessary for the website to function, they improve usability and convenience; these cookies are only placed if you provide your consent.
Analytics cookies: These cookies collect information about how visitors interact with our website, such as which pages are visited most often and how users navigate the site. This data helps us improve website performance, optimize content, and enhance the user experience; these cookies are only placed if you provide your consent. We use the following analytics cookies.
Matomo Cookies:
This website uses Matomo (formerly Piwik), an open source software which enables the statistical analysis of website visits. Matomo uses cookies (text files) which are saved on your computer and which allow us to analyze how you use our website. The website user information generated by the cookies will only be saved on the servers of our IT Department. We use this information to analyze www.eso.org visits and to prepare reports on website activities. These data will not be disclosed to third parties.
On behalf of ESO, Matomo will use this information for the purpose of evaluating your use of the website, compiling reports on website activity and providing other services relating to website activity and internet usage.
Matomo cookies settings:
Additional Third-party cookies on ESO websites: some of our pages display content from external providers, e.g. YouTube.
Such third-party services are outside of ESO control and may, at any time, change their terms of service, use of cookies, etc.
YouTube: Some videos on the ESO website are embedded from ESO’s official YouTube channel. We have enabled YouTube’s privacy-enhanced mode, meaning that no cookies are set unless the user actively clicks on the video to play it. Additionally, in this mode, YouTube does not store any personally identifiable cookie data for embedded video playbacks. For more details, please refer to YouTube’s embedding videos information page.
Cookies can also be classified based on the following elements.
Regarding the domain, there are:
- First-party cookies, set by the website you are currently visiting. They are stored by the same domain that you are browsing and are used to enhance your experience on that site;
- Third-party cookies, set by a domain other than the one you are currently visiting.
As for their duration, cookies can be:
- Browser-session cookies, which are deleted when the user closes the browser;
- Stored cookies, which stay on the user's device for a predetermined period of time.
How to manage cookies
Cookie settings: You can modify your cookie choices for the ESO webpages at any time by clicking on the link Cookie settings at the bottom of any page.
In your browser: If you wish to delete cookies or instruct your browser to delete or block cookies by default, please visit the help pages of your browser:
Please be aware that if you delete or decline cookies, certain functionalities of our website may be not be available and your browsing experience may be affected.
You can set most browsers to prevent any cookies being placed on your device, but you may then have to manually adjust some preferences every time you visit a site/page. And some services and functionalities may not work properly at all (e.g. profile logging-in, shop check out).
Updates to the ESO Cookies Policy
The ESO Cookies Policy may be subject to future updates, which will be made available on this page.
Additional information
For any queries related to cookies, please contact: pdprATesoDOTorg.
As ESO public webpages are managed by our Department of Communication, your questions will be dealt with the support of the said Department.