Deformable mirrors: design fundamentals for force actuation of continuous facesheets
conference paper
Adaptive Optics is established as essential technology in current and future ground based (extremely) large telescopes to compensate for atmospheric turbulence. Deformable mirrors for astronomic purposes have a high number of actuators (> 10k), a relatively large stroke (> 10µm) on a small spacing (< 10mm) and a high control bandwidth (> 100Hz). The availability of piezoelectric ceramics as an actuator principle has driven the development of many adaptive deformable mirrors towards inappropriately stiff displacement actuation. This, while the use of force actuation supersedes piezos in performance and longevity while being less costly per channel by a factor of 10-20. This paper presents a model which is independent of the actuator type used for actuation of continuous facesheet deformable mirrors, to study the design parameters such as: actuator spacing & coupling, influence function, peak-valley stroke, dynamical behavior: global & local, etc. The model is validated using finite element simulations and its parameters are used to derive design fundamentals for optimization.
TNO Identifier
430696
ISSN
0277786X
ISBN
9780819477569
Article nr.
74660G
Source title
Advanced Wavefront Control: methods, devices, and applications VII, 6 August 2009, San Diego, CA, USA
Editor(s)
Carreras, R.A.
Rhoadarmer, T.A.
Dayton, D.C.
Rhoadarmer, T.A.
Dayton, D.C.
Files
To receive the publication files, please send an e-mail request to TNO Repository.