Poster + Paper
28 August 2024 LFAST 20x telescope: design and testing
Author Affiliations +
Conference Poster
Abstract

This paper describes the design development and prototyping for the LFAST telescopes (Large Fiber Array Spectroscopic Telescope). LFAST is an innovative concept in ground-based telescopes, to provide a large collecting area for spectroscopy at relatively low cost, by duplicating large numbers of inexpensive, small (0.76m) aperture “unit” telescopes.

This work includes: the design development and testing of: a low-cost 18-point mirror support for the 0.76m thin meniscus mirrors; a compact, lightweight steel structure to hold twenty “unit” telescope in a single 20x telescope mount; the telescope software and control development; the ALT-AZ drive system consisting of off-the-shelf slew-bearing worm servo drives and finally, several design innovations to address the particularly challenging requirement to operate the 20x telescope in open air, without an enclosure.

We will report on progress and present results from the design development and analysis,as well as laboratory and real-world testing of a first-generation 1x Telescope and a prototype LFAST 20x Telescope.

© (2024) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Peter Gray, Kevin Gilliam, Jason Patrou, Erich Bugueno, Gilberto Chavez, Nick Didato, Warren Foster, James Dilbeka, and Jenna Mas "LFAST 20x telescope: design and testing", Proc. SPIE 13094, Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes X, 130943Q (28 August 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3020348
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KEYWORDS
Telescopes

Mirrors

Design

Prototyping

Actuators

Interfaces

Control systems

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