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On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 18:47:47 GMT, Jan Panteltje
wrote: I was under the impression (could be wrong of cause) that in these fluid lenses the curvature is set by a voltage gradient. That would mean that if you had several electrodes, you could control curvature locally perhaps. Transparent metallized pattern on bottom container concected to output electrodes of a chip? These things only take a few volt. Who knows what the future will bring. I can certainly believe it is possible to make a fluid lens where complex spatial changes in curvature can be controlled. But the current technology seems limited to essentially changing the simple curvature of a meniscus. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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"Chris L Peterson" wrote in message
... On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 14:03:07 GMT, Jan Panteltje wrote: I have been wondering if somehow fluid lenses could be used for adaptive optics in a telescope... The most basic AO correction is for image shift (usually called tip/tilt). Any system needs to address this, and it isn't obvious how fluid lenses could do so. Beyond that, there are many high order corrections. While this can involve a change in focus, which a variable lens could correct for, the corrections are typically achieved by altering the wavefront over multiple zones- something a single lens can't do. The usual actuator for AO is a flexible mirror, and this is not the difficult part of the problem. A flexible mirror can be made quite inexpensively these days, especially if there were some high volume application. The flexible mirror, by itself, if useless unless coupled with actuators that can deform it, a computer to drive the actuators based on some measurements of the wavefront distortion, and a means to take those measurements. For amateur use this probably means something quite a bit smaller and far more economical than what the professionals use. Whether such a device can be made small enough and economical enough is one question. Whether enough amateurs will use it is another. As I see it, you might invent a telescope whose primary, probably a mirror, can do it, but its utility might be questionable, depending on the method chosen to measure the wavefront distortion, but an add-on to an existing system doesn't seem to be practical. Then there's the question of the economics of it all. This has been the trend for decades now. The professionals come up with some idea for their requirements. Some amateurs with enough resources to try it for themselves find a more economical way to do it, but there is either not enough interests in the possibilities or enough amateurs with the right resources to copy the attempt. If both of these problems are overcome, then it starts making significant inroads into the amateur community. Autoguiding, CCD imaging, even webcams which can be seen as fast data takes ala scintillation imagers (but used for different purposes and goals) were done via this route. Not everything has flowed in this direction of course, because the requirements of the professionals don't necessarily overlap with those of the amateur, but some have. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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IMHO,
A.O. Has never been closer to the reach of Amateur Astronomy. As the industrial push for A.O. continues, the possibility of lower cost components has already become evident with sites like Ebay where I have seen tip/tilt and DMs for sale. For Astronomy, Location, location, location, location. You use AO with your best telescope at the best site. Best results in a photon limited system comes from systems that need the least static corrections (optics) and have the lowest optically significant turbulence. AO can't make a bad site good. We did some seeing measurements two months ago at the VATT and had seeing from 0.5 to 1.5 arc seconds most of the time. 80 or 90 percent of the seeing was near the telescope. (under 1 Km) We are not ready to say how much was at the telescope/dome level but I suspect from a few percent to all at times. This means: Speeds are not as high as the upper layers Iso patch size is larger than in an upper layer dominated case D.O.D. ie star wars did R and D using AO for various applications and produced high order non photon limited systems with as high a bandwidth as they could because the were tracking bats out of hell. Mt Wilson has such a mirror, 256 elements ? and on the Hooker (100") can go down to 12 th ? depending on the color of the star. You need a big scope to go to faint. The Old Mt Wilson AO system used a custom TEC CCD and a lot of DSP boards not to mention 256 Hv amplifiers. These systems used a wave front detector, usually a Shack/Hartmann that breaks the light in to sub pupils used to control the tip/tilt of each region buy the displacement transducer near the sub pupils. The Reconstructor takes the wavefront signals and produces mirror control signals. Faster is better as you are in a control loop. All of the above is simplified by measuring and controlling the mirror curvature. F. Roddier is the man to read the works of to understand all about it. The re constructor for a curvature system is a diagonal matrix making it fast. My first system was analog the computer just watched the loop, taking data. Curvature mirrors are being made for optical communications and as the volume goes up the prices go down. These are low voltage pizo bimorph mirrors and could be made cheap if you knew how. (i don't) That leaves the detector and that's the rub. To work well it needs to be noiseless with high Q.E. not to mention a fast readout time. We used APD detectors and kHZ readout rates =$$$ and a fiber fed lens array (low fat) and that is another trick. CMOS based sensors are in a fast lane to low noise performance. It may be possible to obtain cmos sensors with machine vision processors integrated in the near future. I would start by using a bimorph to correct the static mirror errors first. You would have a knob for tip/tilt, defocus, astigmatism X any Y etc. That would allow people like me with aging eyes to be able to enjoy not wearing glasses at the eyepiece. When a detector comes along then go for it. While you are waiting you could play with non photon limited bright systems. For vibration these systems need to be fast with a large tip/tilt range. With a laser beacon or possibly with techniques used in solar adaptive optics one could make a daytime horizontal path system. One last comment (Whew) See Hardy and Wallner SPIE Vol 2201 Adaptive Optics in Astronomy (1994) pp 77-87 "Wavefront compensation using active lenses" Using two lenses that you tip/tilt and dispalce will correct eight Zernike terms. They tell all. Clear dark steady and closed loop. Dan |
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Babcock's proposed (1953) Eidophor used a mirror covered with a film of oil
scanned by an electron beam to change the local slope. It was never implemented, however. Marc Reinig UCO Lick Observatory Laboratory for Adaptive Optics "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1111413792.625bb338adab5b3084454285a3190639@t eranews... I have been wondering if somehow fluid lenses could be used for adaptive optics in a telescope. Then you could use electical voltages to change lens properties locally. http://www.heise.de/newsticker/resul...einze%20Linsen It is a German article, in short it describes a lens formed by a layer of oil on a layer of some other fluid, with an electical field applied. These lenses are extremely small, a French company has already made a zoom objective for a cellphone camera with this technology. http://www.varioptic.com/en/ It uses less power then a mechanical construction. I wonder if a big one could be made.... |
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Adaptive optics for a small telescope?
"Babcock's proposed (1953) Eidophor used a mirror covered With a film of oil Ccanned by an electron beam To change the local slope. It was never implemented, However." ~ Marc Reinig UCO Lick Observatory Laboratory for Adaptive Optics "Renigging? Truth, redress, forthcoming?" ~ Twittering |
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Adaptive optics for a small telescope?
"Babcock's proposed (1953) Eidophor used a mirror covered With a film of oil Scanned by an electron beam To change the local slope. It was never implemented, However." ~ Marc Reinig UCO Lick Observatory Laboratory for Adaptive Optics "Reneging? Truth, redress, confession, forthcoming? Annus Horribilis ~ A year of great unhappiness Or misfortune." ~ Twittering |
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Vulgaris
Vulgate Vulgar Latin Vulgarity Vulture! Vying ~ Flying |
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Steve wrote:
Jan Panteltje wrote: I have been wondering if somehow fluid lenses could be used for adaptive optics in a telescope. Jan, I don't think actuation is a critical problem, more like others have said, AO for astronomy is light starved and needs to be high speed. IIRC the rest of AO (usually implemented as a deformable mirror, not a lens) is an artificial star created with a laser, and used with detectors and a serious computer to correct for atmospheric distortions. The FAA seems to be a bit nervous these days about lasers being shot into the sky... -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals... |
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Why not search for a cure to prostate problems first, and go back to
outfitting dog sleds with J12 Pratt & Whittney engines? !? Gleb wrote: I consider designing a low-cost AO system for a small telescope. It seems we have all necessary resources: we produce deformable mirrors and wavefront sensors, we also produce closed-loop AO systems with up to 59 channels, so integration wouldn't be too complicated as all structural parts are available. On the other hand we have little experience with astronomy and therefore any advice would help. The preliminary tech requirements: 1. To be mounted in 1.25 inch ocular socket (2" socket??). To be used with telescopes with diameter in the range 25cm to 1m. 2. Aberration free afocal mirror system, transparent in the visible and near IR and fully operational even with AO switched off. To achieve this, we'll use a system with a field of a couple of mm (in the primary focus) for a foacl ratio of 1/10. The field and F# are compromized to reduce the complexity of the optics, but the field will be limited anyway by the anisoplanatism of the AO and the F# must be small for a HR imaging 3. To have al least 19 degrees of freedom (depending on the seeing can be good to correct up to ~13 Zernike terms to about 10% of the uncorrected value). 37 degrees of freedom is also possible but I'm not sure a small scope really will collect enough light to correct that many terms in real time. 4. To operate on a natural star with magnitude of at least 4 (with a 25cm telescope), using 50% of light for running the AO and 50% for registration. 5. To be easy in setting up and running. To use single +12V power supply and three cables connecting the system with the deformable mirror controller and the dedicated control laptop PC. 6. The total weight of the optical correction unit mounted to the telescope not to exceed 1kg. Mirror controller incl power supply - also 1 kg, add some extra for cables and laptop. The system is supposed to provide a diffraction-limited imaging in a rather bad seeing conditions. It will allow stable imaging of bright objects such as stars, double stars and planets. Another advantage of using such a system is that it will correct the aberrations of the telescope, improving the quality of optics, for instance making the period of mirror cooling also available for observations. In fact, correction of the static aberrations can be done on a bright star once, and then the system can be used in static correction mode. The project is technically feasible (although quite expensive in its development stage), but I still have my doubts regarding its usefulness: 1. Small field and ability to work on only bright objects will limit the usability to very bright double stars and planets. Are (amateur) astronomers really interested in this? 2. Although we plan to have it transparent, the system will limit the field of view and reduce the amount of light available for observation. The light loss will be compensated by the resolution gain, but the effect can be limited or even negligible for a small telescope. 3. The system will require an additional laptop computer to run the AO and will add to the complexity of the telescope setup. 4. It can be quite expensive, especially in the beginning, though if there is a market, the price can be very acceptable. I would appreciate any comments on the above mentioned topics. Gleb Vdovin OKO Tech PO Box 581, 2600 AN Delft, The Netherlands http://www.okotech.com |
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Marc Reinig wrote:
Babcock's proposed (1953) Eidophor used a mirror covered with a film of oil scanned by an electron beam to change the local slope. It was never implemented, however. ? Eidophors were invented by Fischer in 1939 and the first one demonstrated in 1943. There was one still in use in a lecture theatre at my university in the late 1970's. There is a picture of the prototype online at: http://www.cinephoto.co.uk/eidophor_1.htm Regards, Martin Brown Marc Reinig UCO Lick Observatory Laboratory for Adaptive Optics "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1111413792.625bb338adab5b3084454285a3190639@t eranews... I have been wondering if somehow fluid lenses could be used for adaptive optics in a telescope. Then you could use electical voltages to change lens properties locally. http://www.heise.de/newsticker/resul...einze%20Linsen It is a German article, in short it describes a lens formed by a layer of oil on a layer of some other fluid, with an electical field applied. These lenses are extremely small, a French company has already made a zoom objective for a cellphone camera with this technology. http://www.varioptic.com/en/ It uses less power then a mechanical construction. I wonder if a big one could be made.... |
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