The Vera C. Rubin Observatory is an integrated survey system, currently under construction in Chile, to accomplish a 10-year optical survey of the southern sky. The 8.4-meter Simonyi Survey Telescope mount is nearing completion and undergoing final verification and performance testing. Since the system is optimized for etendue, the telescope mount slewing performance is particularly critical to overall survey efficiency. For example, this high performance mount is required to slew 3.5 degrees, on the sky, and settle in a 4-second period. Here an account of the mount subsystem is presented and selected dynamic performance results from on-site testing are described.
The Simonyi Survey Telescope (formerly known as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope) of the Rubin Observatory is an 8.4m telescope now in construction on Cerro Pachón, in Chile. This telescope has been designed to conduct a 10 years’ survey of the sky in which it will map the entire night sky every three nights. The Mirror Cell Assembly system is a 9x9m steel structure that provides positioning, support, figure correction and temperature control to the primary and tertiary mirror. It is composed of two main systems, the Support System and the Thermal Control System. The Support System provides positioning, support and figure control of the mirror as well as dynamic forces compensation. The Thermal Control System will control the bulk temperature and temperature variations throughout the mirror. The temperature variations produce thermal distortions of the mirror which produce image degrading distortion of the optical surface. Variations between the bulk temperature and the ambient degrade local seeing and can produce condensation. The mirror cell assembly was designed and build in Tucson, Arizona by the LSST engineering team, and was tested, to confirm correct integration, at the Richard F Caris Mirror Lab to confirm the optical performance of the system using the real glass mirror. After successful testing, the mirror cell assembly was disassembled, packed and shipped to the Cerro Pachón summit in Chile where it was integrated with the surrogate mirror, and installed on the telescope mount assembly (TMA) for system performance test. Once system performance test concluded, the mirror cell was transported to the maintenance level to remove the metal surrogate mirror, install the glass and coat. After coating the mirror, the mirror cell assembly will be integrated with the telescope mount assembly to conduct final testing and verification.
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory is reaching the final stages of its construction and integration, advancing towards its 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). One of the key milestones was the installation of the M1M3 Mirror Cell Assembly onto the Simonyi Survey Telescope’s (SST) Telescope Mount Assembly (TMA). The Cell Assembly actively supports the primary/tertiary mirror (M1M3), playing a crucial role in maintaining the glass safe and ensuring image quality. However, before the mirror glass installation, the Cell Assembly was installed on the TMA while supporting a steel surrogate M1M3 mirror. This surrogate closely mimics the glass mirror’s mass, center of gravity, and geometry. The M1M3 cell and surrogate were tested under conditions that simulate rapid field changes in the sky, which are essential for the observatory’s ambitious sky mapping schedule. These tests, extending from 1-100% of designed telescope slew velocities/accelerations, assessed the M1M3 active mirror support system, including the force balance system’s performance, the hardpoint behaviors, and the efficacy of the pneumatic figure control actuators. Preliminary results suggest the system meets operational requirements, ensuring safety and effectiveness at full speed.
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory is nearing completion, and we are embarking on a campaign to optimize the image quality during its upcoming 10-year optical survey. Here, we present the tools and methods we are implementing to disentangle and quantify the different sources of image degradation, as well as our plans to correct and mitigate as many of these different contributions to seeing as possible. The tools include an on-site Differential Image Motion Monitor (DIMM) for measuring atmospheric seeing, multiple 2D and 3D sonic anemometers for measuring in-dome wind speed and turbulence, and direct dome seeing monitors. We also implement a guider mode that allows data to be taken at 9Hz over small regions and a stuttered and streaked imaging mode that allows us to measure mount tracking and jitter and perform atmospheric tomography. Additionally, we use curvature wavefront sensing to estimate the residual wavefront error to support the telescope’s alignment and focus. This is the same algorithm that we will use for the Simonyi Survey Telescope. Many of these tools, as well as additional techniques to quantify the contribution of astigmatism to seeing, have been tested at the Auxiliary Telescope (AuxTel). This 1.2m telescope acts as a pathfinder for the Rubin Observatory. We present initial results and the creation of an image quality budget table for AuxTel to characterize and monitor significant sources of image quality degradation. We then discuss plans for implementing these techniques on the 8.4m Simonyi Survey Telescope.
The Rubin Observatory Commissioning Camera (ComCam) is a scaled down (144 Megapixel) version of the 3.2 Gigapixel LSSTCam which will start the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), currently scheduled to start in 2024. The purpose of the ComCam is to verify the LSSTCam interfaces with the major subsystems of the observatory as well as evaluate the overall performance of the system prior to the start of the commissioning of the LSSTCam hardware on the telescope. With the delivery of all the telescope components to the summit site by 2020, the team has already started the high-level interface verification, exercising the system in a steady state model similar to that expected during the operations phase of the project. Notable activities include a simulated “slew and expose” sequence that includes moving the optical components, a settling time to account for the dynamical environment when on the telescope, and then taking an actual sequence of images with the ComCam. Another critical effort is to verify the performance of the camera refrigeration system, and testing the operational aspects of running such a system on a moving telescope in 2022. Here we present the status of the interface verification and the planned sequence of activities culminating with on-sky performance testing during the early-commissioning phase.
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