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NASA Telescope Aces Super-Cold Optical Test

By R&D Editors | October 16, 2015

The Pathfinder was pushed into the Chamber for OGSE2. Image: NASA/Chris GunnTesting is crucial part of NASA’s success on Earth and in space. So, as the actual flight components of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope come together, engineers are testing the non-flight equipment to ensure that tests on the real Webb telescope later goes safely and according to plan. Recently, the “pathfinder telescope,” or just “Pathfinder,” completed its first super-cold optical test that resulted in many first-of-a-kind demonstrations.

“This test is the first dry-run of the equipment and procedures we will use to conduct an end-to-end optical test of the flight telescope and instruments,” says Mark Clampin, Webb telescope Observatory Project Scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. “It provides confidence that once the flight telescope is ready, we are fully prepared for a successful test of the flight hardware.”

The Pathfinder is a non-flight replica of the Webb telescope’s center section backplane, or “backbone,” that includes mirrors.

The flight backplane comes in three segments, a center section and two wing-like parts, all of which will support large hexagonal mirrors on the Webb telescope. The pathfinder only consists of the center part of the backplane. However, during the test, it held two full size spare primary mirror segments and a full size spare secondary mirror to demonstrate the ability to optically test and align the telescope at the planned operating temperatures of -400 F (-240 C).

The first cryogenic optical testing of the Pathfinder was successfully completed in Chamber A at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Chamber A was originally used to test the Apollo capsule. This test demonstrated new helium and nitrogen cooling systems installed for the Webb telescope testing which allowed the Pathfinder to achieve those frigid temperature that will simulate operating temperatures we will have at the L2 Lagrange point. The cooling system is installed in the chamber.  There is a vacuum chamber with a nitrogen shroud inside of it and then a helium shroud inside of the helium shroud. The Pathfinder is then inside the Helium shroud.

“The most significant breakthrough was the first-ever cryogenic optical alignment and testing of multiple primary mirror segments in a process known as ‘phasing,'” says Lee Feinberg, Webb telescope Optical Telescope Element Manager at NASA Goddard.

“During the demonstration, mirrors that were initially misaligned by millimeters were aligned to each other using actuators operating at -400 F to better than one-one-thousandth diameter of a human hair (or a fraction of a wavelength of light) such that the two primary mirror segments were optically equivalent to a single monolithic mirror,” Feinberg says.

The second “first” involved the vertical orientation of the testing of the mirrors. It marked the first time a lightweight cryogenic mirror of this type had been tested in a second gravity orientation. “To understand a second gravity orientation, think of a cup,” Feinberg says. “When the cup is face up so you can pour water in it, it is vertical to gravity. Now put the cup on its side and it is horizontal to gravity. Mirrors are like cups in this explanation.” That allowed for successful cross-checking of the predicted zero-gravity performance of the mirrors.

“In another major achievement, four large super cold windmills carrying steerable cameras were able to measure the alignment of all of the mirrors and structure to better than one-tenth of a millimeter using a process called photogrammetry,” Feinberg says. Photogrammetry is a technique that takes images from multiple to simulate operating temperatures orientations, combines those images, and then using triangulation algorithms to determine distances between objects in those scenes. 

The phasing demonstration used a new metrology device developed for NASA to test segmented telescopes by 4D Technologies Corp. called a multi-wavelength interferometer and used a reflective null lens designed and built by Harris Corp.

After this test completed, the flight Aft Optics System, which includes the Tertiary Mirror and Fine Steering Mirror, was installed on the Pathfinder to prepare for a second test. The full Pathfinder was then outfitted with special fiber-fed infrared optical sources that simulate star images. Those star images, or infrared sources, along with a specially instrumented infrared detector will be used during the second test to perform end-to-end testing of the full Pathfinder telescope system and ensure they function as simulated stars.

After that second test is complete late in 2015, all optical test systems will have been checked out.

A third and final precursor test called “Thermal Pathfinder” will follow in 2016 that will fully test all the test equipment needed to simulate the temperature environment of space.  Once this is complete, all test equipment and procedures needed to test the actual full flight telescope and the Integrated Science Instrument Module or ISIM assembled as a unit in early 2017 will be checked-out and ready.

Orbital ATK fabricated the composite structure of the pathfinder backplane. The pathfinder (minus the mirrors) was tested at Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach, Calif.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the scientific successor to NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, and it will be the most powerful space telescope ever built. It is being assembled in a Class 10,000 cleanroom at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. Webb is an international project led by NASA with its partners, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency.

Release Date: October 15, 2015
Source: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center 

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