Alignment telescope for Antares
Abstract
The Antares Automatic Alignment System employs a specially designed telescope for alignment of its laser beamlines. There are two telescopes in the system, and since each telescope is a primary alignment reference, stringent boresight accuracy and stability over the focus range were required. Optical and mechanical designs, which meet this requirements as well as that of image quality over a wide wavelength band, are described. Special test techniques for initial assembly and alignment of the telescope are also presented. The telescope, which has a 180-mm aperture FK51-KZF2 type glass doublet objective, requires a boresight accuracy of 2.8 (SIGMA)rad at two focal lengths, and object distances between 11 meters and infinity. Travel of a smaller secondary doublet provides focus from 11 m to infinity with approximately 7.8 m effective focal length. By flipping in a third doublet, the effective focal length is reduced to 2.5 m. Telescope alignment was accomplished by using a rotary air bearing to establish an axis in front of the system and placing the focus of a Laser Unequal Path Interferometer (LUPI) at the image plane.
- Publication:
-
Presented at the Los Alamos Conf. on Optics '83
- Pub Date:
- 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983opti.confR..11A
- Keywords:
-
- Accuracy;
- Alignment;
- Boresights;
- Optical Properties;
- Telescopes;
- Apertures;
- Beams (Radiation);
- Carbon Dioxide Lasers;
- Design Analysis;
- Interferometers;
- Lasers and Masers