Paper
11 October 1989 Large Aperture Two Mirror Collimator Diamond Machined For Electro-Optical Test
James R. Schaffer Jr., John Casstevens, Samuel R. Lyle Jr.
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A two-mirror, off axis Cassegrain telescope was fabricated and assembled for use in making Forward Looking Infrared Receiver (FLIR) to laser boresight measurements. The collimator was designed to operate over two non-coherent bands (0.30<λ<1.10 μm and 8<λ<12 μm) and the coherent 1.06 μm line. The compact multispectral collimator applications include both static and simulated dynamic operating conditions. This paper describes the results of the element, collimator and integration tests associated with the development of this steep diamond machined system. The mirrors were diamond machined out of aluminum that was nickel plated, post polished and hard gold coated. The unobscured aperture is greater than ten inches with an effective focal length of approximately ninety four inches. The large, fast primary mirror, which is an off axis portion of an f/0.37 paraboloid, drove novel fabrication and test methods for the collimator.
© (1989) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
James R. Schaffer Jr., John Casstevens, and Samuel R. Lyle Jr. "Large Aperture Two Mirror Collimator Diamond Machined For Electro-Optical Test", Proc. SPIE 1113, Reflective Optics II, (11 October 1989); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.955595
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KEYWORDS
Collimators

Mirrors

Diamond

Forward looking infrared

Aluminum

Cameras

Optical fabrication

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