Three-mirror anastigmat

Three-mirror anastigmat of Paul or Paul-Baker form. A Paul design has a parabolic primary with spherical secondary and tertiary mirrors; A Paul-Baker design modifies the secondary slightly to achieve a flat focal plane.

A three-mirror anastigmat is a telescope built with three curved mirrors, enabling it to minimize all three main optical aberrations - spherical aberration, coma, and astigmatism. This is primarily used to enable wide fields of view, much larger than possible with telescopes with just one or two curved surfaces.

A telescope with only one curved mirror, such as a Newtonian telescope, will always have aberrations. If the mirror is spherical, it will suffer from spherical aberration. If the mirror is made parabolic, to correct the spherical aberration, then it must necessarily suffer from coma and astigmatism. With two curved mirrors, such as the Ritchey–Chrétien telescope, coma can be eliminated as well. This allows a larger useful field of view. However, such designs still suffer from astigmatism. This too can be cancelled by including a third curved optical element. When this element is a mirror, the result is a three-mirror anastigmat. In practice, the design may also include any number of flat fold mirrors, used to bend the optical path into more convenient configurations.

History

Many combinations of three mirror figures can be used to cancel all third-order aberrations. In general these involve solving a relatively complex set of equations. A few configurations are simple enough, however, that they could be designed starting from a few intuitive concepts.

Paul

The first were proposed in 1935 by Maurice Paul.[1] The basic idea behind Paul's solution is that spherical mirrors, with an aperture stop at the centre of curvature, have only spherical aberration - no coma or astigmatism (but they do produce an image on a curved surface of half the radius of the spherical mirror, for a mirror in air). So if the spherical aberration can be corrected, a very wide field of view can be obtained. This is similar to the conventional Schmidt design, but the Schmidt does this with a refractive corrector plate instead of a third mirror.

Paul's idea was to start with a Mersenne beam compressor, which looks like a Cassegrain made from two (confocal) paraboloids, with both the input and output beams collimated. The compressed input beam is then directed to a spherical tertiary mirror, which results in traditional spherical aberration. Paul's key insight is that the secondary can then be converted back to a spherical mirror. One way to look at this is to imagine the tertiary mirror, which suffers from spherical aberration, is replaced by a Schmidt telescope, with a correcting plate at its centre of curvature. If the radii of the secondary and tertiary are of the same magnitude, but opposite sign, and if the centre of curvature of the tertiary is placed directly at the vertex of the secondary mirror, then the Schmidt plate would lie on top of the paraboloid secondary mirror. Therefore the Schmidt plate required to make the tertiary mirror a Schmidt telescope is eliminated by the paraboloid figuring on the convex secondary of the Mersenne system, as each corrects the same magnitude of spherical aberration, but the opposite sign. Also, as the system of Mersenne + Schmidt is the sum of two anastigmats: the Mersenne system is an anastigmat, and so is the Schmidt system, the resultant system is also an anastigmat, as third-order aberrations are purely additive.[2] In addition the secondary is now easier to fabricate. This design is also called a Mersenne-Schmidt, since it uses a Mersenne configuration as the corrector for a Schmidt telescope.

Paul-Baker

Paul's solution had a curved focal plane, but this was corrected in the Paul-Baker design, introduced in 1969 by James Gilbert Baker.[3] The Paul-Baker design adds extra spacing and reshapes the secondary to elliptical, which corrects field curvature to obtain a flat focal plane.[4]

Korsch

A more general set of solutions was developed by Dietrich Korsch in 1972.[5] A Korsch telescope is corrected for spherical aberration, coma, astigmatism, and field curvature, meaning that images on a flat detector will be the same size at the center as at the edges, and can have a wide field of view while ensuring that there is little stray light in the focal plane.

Examples

References

  1. Paul, M. (1935). "Systèmes correcteurs pour réflecteurs astronomiques". Revue d'Optique Theorique et Instrumentale 14 (5): 169–202.
  2. Wilson, R. N. (2007). Reflecting Telescope Optics I. Springer. p. 227. ISBN 978-3-540-40106-3.
  3. Baker, J.G. (1969). "On improving the effectiveness of large telescopes". IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems. AES-5 (2): 261–272. Bibcode:1969ITAES...5..261B. doi:10.1109/TAES.1969.309914.
  4. Sacek, V. (14 July 2006). "Paul-Baker and other three-mirror anastigmatic aplanats". Telescope-Optics.net. Retrieved 2013-08-13.
  5. Korsch, Dietrich (1970). "Closed Form Solution for Three-Mirror Telescopes, Corrected for Spherical Aberration, Coma, Astigmatism, and Field Curvature". Applied Optics 11 (12): 2986–2987. Bibcode:1972ApOpt..11.2986K. doi:10.1364/AO.11.002986.
  6. "DEIMOS-2: Costeffective, Very-high Resolution Multispectral Imagery" (PDF).
  7. "Technical Specifications of DubaiSat 2".
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