The Large Binocular Telescope Project
J. M. Hill
University of Arizona, Large Binocular Telescope Project
Steward Observatory, Tucson, AZ 85721
email: jhill@as.arizona.edu
http://medusa.as.arizona.edu/lbtwww/tech/spielbt.htm
Proceedings of SPIE conference on Optical Telescopes of Today and Tomorrow, 2871, (1996)
Abstract
1. LBT Partners and Funding
2. Design Drivers
3. Optical Configuration
4. Telescope
5. Enclosure
6 Observatory Site
7. Primary Mirrors
8. Conclusions
9. References
Abstract
The Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) Project has evolved from concepts
first proposed in 1985. The present partners involved in the design
and construction of this 2 x 8.4 meter binocular telescope are the
University of Arizona, Italy represented by the Osservatorio
Astrofisico di Arcetri and the Research Corporation based in Tucson.
These three partners have committed sufficient funds to build the
enclosure and the telescope populated with a single 8.4 meter optical
train --- approximately 40 million dollars (1989). Based on this
commitment, design and construction activities are now moving
forward. Additional partners are being sought. The next mirror to be
cast at the Steward Observatory Mirror Lab in the fall of 1996 will be
the first borosilicate honeycomb primary for LBT. The baseline
optical configuration of LBT includes wide field Cassegrain
secondaries with optical foci above the primaries to provide a
corrected one degree field at F/4. The infrared F/15 secondaries are
a Gregorian design to allow maximum flexibility for adaptive optics.
The F/15 secondaries are undersized to provide a low thermal
background focal plane which is unvignetted over a 4 arcminute
diameter field-of-view. The interferometric focus combining the light
from the two 8.4 meter primaries will reimage two folded Gregorian
focal planes to a central location. The telescope elevation structure
accommodates swing arms which allow rapid interchange of the various
secondary and tertiary mirrors. Maximum stiffness and minimal thermal
disturbance continue to be important drivers for the detailed design
of the telescope. The telescope structure accommodates installation
of a vacuum bell jar for aluminizing the primary mirrors in-situ on
the telescope. The detailed design of the telescope structure will be
completed in 1996 by ADS Italia (Lecco) and European Industrial
Engineering (Mestre). The final enclosure design is now in progress
at M3 Engineering (Tucson), EIE and ADS Italia. Construction activities on
the Emerald Peak (Mt. Graham) site have resumed in the summer of 1996.
Keywords: astronomical telescopes, interferometry, honeycomb mirrors
View Figure 1 here
1. LBT Partners and Funding
The total budget for the Large Binocular Telescope Project is $60
million ($1989) or about $75 million in current dollars. This
includes about $10 million for an initial complement of
instrumentation. Accounting is always referenced to 1989 dollars in
order to clearly separate the effects of inflation and fluctuating
exchange rates from design changes and uncertain construction
costs. The budget includes all the costs of design and technical
development and construction, but does not include fundraising costs
or legal expenses related to the site. Some savings have been
achieved by sharing the costs of developing the honeycomb mirror
technology and control systems with other projects such as the MMT
Conversion1 and Magellan2
The present consortium partners are: The University of Arizona committing
$15 million ($1989) for a 25% share of the total telescope;
Italy represented by the Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri also
committing a 25% share; The Research Corporation based in Tucson
committing a 12.5% share; and The Ohio State University retaining a
4% share after withdrawing as a major partner in 1991. The present
partners have already committed sufficient funds to assure the
completion of the telescope, the enclosure and a single 8.4 meter
optical train. The budget for this so-called ``one-eyed telescope''
is approximately $40 million ($1989). It now appears likely that
Germany will join as an additional partner for up to a 25% share.
This will assure sufficient funds for the procurement of the second
optical train and full binocular operation. An additional partner is
still being sought to fill out the remaining 8-12% of the baseline
project.
2. Design Drivers
2.1 Observational Priorities
As the conceptual design of the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT)
developed over the years3,4, the Scientific Advisory Committee
(SAC) set the following observational priorities which were used to
guide the philosophy and optimization of the telescope and its
capabilities. These priorities were evolved based on assessments of
which astrophysical problems were most interesting, and on which
observations were tractable with ambitious but practical technology.
These priorities are: interferometric imaging over wavelengths from
0.4 to 400µ m; infrared imaging and photometry over wavelengths
from 2.0 to 30µ m; wide field multiobject spectroscopy over
wavelengths from 0.3 to 1.6µ m; faint object, long slit and high
resolution spectroscopy over wavelengths from 0.3 to 30µ m.
2.2 Optical and Mechanical Design Drivers
Many of the priorities listed above are common to nearly all of the
current large telescope projects. After all, these are the principal reasons
for building a large optical/infrared telescope. Perhaps the desire
for exploiting diffraction-limited imaging over a baseline of more than
twenty meters and the desire for a wide field-of-view are the features
that distinguish LBT from the various other 6 -- 12 meter telescopes now
under construction. The following principles were the guidance for
developing the conceptual design and its refinement into the detailed
design described below.
- Maintain large total collecting area for sensitivity on faint objects.
- Preserve excellent image quality through passive, active and adaptive
control of seeing and other aberrations.
- Assure low background by implementing a clean thermal infrared design.
- Make versatile instrumentation and allow rapid changes in configuration to
take maximum advantage of specific observing conditions.
- Achieve high ultimate spatial resolution by providing a relatively long
baseline with the stability and field-of-view provided by a common mounting.
- Pursue low construction and operations costs by careful iteration of
astrophysical specifications, creative design and sound engineering.
2.3 Binocular Interferometry
In addition to providing the collecting area equivalent to an 11.8
meter circular aperture, the two 8.4 meter mirrors on a common mount
allow us to make interferometric observations over an extended
field-of-view (several arcminutes). To carry out the best possible
scientific program and to take advantage of the diffraction limit of
the 22.8 meter baseline, we have set ourselves the following goals for
interferometry: produce a stable phased focal plane; phase the focal
plane over the entire isoplanatic patch; operate from 0.5 to 30µ
m; make the individual telescopes diffraction-limited; use adaptive
correction when needed; match scale, distortion and focus for both
telescopes; achieve minimum obscuration and low emissivity; allow a
rapid switch from other focal stations to take advantage of the best
conditions; and fit the optical systems inside the envelope of the
telescope structure. Additional discussion and details of the
interferometric configuration are provided by Salinari5, Hill6,
and Byard & Bonaccini7.
3. Optical Configuration
3.1. Baseline Focal Stations
The principal optical focal stations on the LBT are twin
trapped Cassegrain foci at F/4. With 3-element refractive
correctors these focal stations provide a 1 degree field-of-view.
The main uses of this trapped position will be for imaging and
multiobject spectroscopy. Space is allowed for instruments up
to 2 meters in diameter.
Twin Gregorian F/15 focal stations are optimized for infrared
performance over a 4 arcminute unvignetted field-of-view with the
aperture stop at the undersized secondary mirror. Instruments up to 3
meters diameter and 4 meters length can be mounted at the direct
Gregorian foci behind the primary mirror. For observations which will
take advantage of the phased combined focal plane of the binocular
telescope a pair of tertiary mirrors can redirect the Gregorian focal
planes to any of three focal stations in the center of the telescope
between the two primary mirrors. At these locations, the Gregorian
focal planes can be reimaged into the beam combination optics as shown
in Figure 2. The middle of these three central focal stations can
also be used as a pseudo-Nasmyth focus with the instrument derotated
into a gravity invariant orientation.
Other focal stations which are possible on the telescope structure,
but which are not included in the baseline configuration are: optical F/15
Gregorian, chopping F/25 Cassegrain, combined F/33, prime and a phased
coud\`e beam which could also feed an interferometric array.
3.2 Secondary Complement
The optical Cassegrain secondaries produce a ~ F/3.8 beam
naked which is slowed to F/4.0 by a 3-element refractive corrector to give
a field-of-view near 1 degree. The optical design of this configuration
has not been completely finalized, but the secondaries will be between 1.2
and 1.3 meters diameter with 2.8 meter diameter baffles. The back focal
distance from the secondary is approximately 3.6 meters. The secondary, the corrector and
the instrument all swing in and out of the beam together on a swing arm to
leave a very clean telescope for infrared use.
The infrared Gregorian F/15.0 secondaries are 871 mm in diameter. These
concave mirrors are undersized sections of an F/14.7 parent telescope
to place the aperture stop at the secondary mirror. The infrared
field-of-view without vignetting is 4 arcminutes diameter. Optical
instruments willing to tolerate a small amount of vignetting can use a
field up to 10 arcminutes in diameter. The focal planes are 2500 mm
behind the primary vertices with classical Gregorian optics (primary
asphere: --1.0000; secondary asphere: --0.7326) It is very probable
that these F/15 secondaries will be fully adaptive from the start of
telescope operation. Using the secondary as the deformable element
provides adaptive correction without any additional optics to add
infrared emissivity to the telescope system. Lloyd-Hart et. al 8 and
Bruns et. al 9 describe a similar adaptive mirror for the MMT
Conversion and some results of testing a prototype. Salinari et. al
5,10 describe the philosophy of the adaptive secondaries in
greater detail. The F/15 swing arms also include provision for a 500
mm flat mirror above the secondary to project a laser beacon from the
center of each telescope. Gray, West & Gallieni11describe themounting and actuation scheme for the secondaries in greater detail.
View Figure 2 here
3.3 Error Budget and Improvements for Infrared Imaging
The error budget specifies that the telescope and its optics will
produce images to match an r0 = 45 cm atmosphere. Hill3 reviews
the error budget and detailed performance specifications. This
specification produces an image which is 0.22 arcsec FWHM in the
visible without including any active or adaptive correction beyond active focus
and alignment at frequencies less than 0.01 Hz. By including rapid tip-tilt
guiding, active figure correction and adaptive wavefront correction, the
detected image can be improved by a factor of two or more for wavelengths
around 2µ m.
4. Telescope
4.1 Telescope Design
The detailed mechanical design of the telescope is
being done by the Italian engineering firms ADS Italia (Lecco) and
European Industrial Engineering (Mestre). This work should be mostly
completed by July 1996. Already over 300 MB of Autocad drawings have
been generated.
The telescope structure is an altitude-azimuth platform design
developed initially by Davison and refined over the years. The
azimuth bearing is a 14 meter diameter steel track attached to the top
of the pier. The telescope rides on this track with four hydrostatic
bearings on the lower corners of the azimuth platform. The azimuth track and
azimuth platform can be seen in Figure 1. On the upper
corners of the azimuth platform, four additional hydrostatic bearings
ride against two curved sectors on the elevation structure of the
telescope. These large ``C-rings'' which are also 14 meters in
diameter form the elevation bearings of the telescope. The azimuth
platform and the elevation sectors also include the mountings for gear
segments and Farrand strip encoders. Eight DC torque motors on the azimuth
platform directly drive pinions against the gear segments for both
axes. The platform geometry of the telescope provides a direct
structural path from the mirror cells and elevation sectors down
through the azimuth platform to the track and the pier. This direct
load path allows us to achieve a lowest eigenfrequency of 8 Hz for the
structure with a relatively modest weight of 520 tons total moving
mass including mirrors and instruments. Del Vecchio et. al 12,13report on
the latest finite element optimizations of the telescope structure.
4.2 Telescope Fabrication
Once the design drawings of the telescope are completed in the
summer of 1996, the project will solicit bids world-wide to select the
company or companies to fabricate and assemble the telescope structure.
We expect to send detailed specifications for a number of work packages out to
bid in the fall of 1996 and to begin placing orders in early 1997. Some
smaller parts of the telescope have already been fabricated as prototypes
as can be seen in Figure 3.
View Figure 3 here
5. Enclosure
5.1 Enclosure Design
The detailed architectural design of the enclosure is being
done by a consortium of companies headed by M3 Engineering &
Technology (Tucson) and including ADS (Lecco) and EIE (Mestre). The
enclosure design is now in the ``design development'' phase. Major
construction of the enclosure and telescope pier should begin during
the 1997 construction season.
As described previously by Salinari & Hill14, the enclosure is a
corotating box design with two sliding shutters over the observing
apertures. In addition to the observing apertures on the front and
top of the rotating section of the building, there are large
ventilation doors on the sides and back of the observing chamber to
promote wind flushing and thermal equilibration. The rotating
building has a pair of 32 metric ton cranes on a common bridge for
handling telescope parts. 5 ton hooks are available for handling
instruments and smaller equipment. Equipment and instruments are
raised from the fixed part of the enclosure through a 4 x 10 meter
floor hatch. The hatch provides access to a ground-level high bay
area where instruments and the aluminizing bell jar are stored. The
telescope elevation axis is located 30 meters above the ground. The
roofline of the enclosure is 50 meters above the ground. Support
equipment which rotates with the telescope is located in an insulated
floor beneath the observing chamber. Ambient temperature air
circulated through the telescope and these equipment areas is
exhausted from the rotating section through whichever of the 2.5 meter
diameter tubes is facing downwind. The total rotating mass is about
1500 tons supported on a circular steel track with four sets of
bogies. Steel framing in the observing chamber is designed with
cross-sections smaller than 15 mm whenever possible to keep the
thermal time constant of the structure short. The control room,
offices and living areas are located on two fixed floors in the lower
12 meters of the enclosure. Snow is removed from the roof and
shutters by melting it with hot air circulated inside the roof
sections. A design drawing of the enclosure is shown in Figure 4.
The enclosure is designed to permit a maximum observing windspeed of
80 km/hour and to have a maximum survival windspeed of 225 km/hour.
View Figure 4 here
6 Observatory Site
6.1 Site Delays
The site of LBT is located on Mt. Graham in the Pinaleno
Mountains in southeastern Arizona. The specific peak selected is
Emerald Peak at an elevation of 10477 feet (3194 meters). Trees on
the site (Emerald Peak) were cut in December 1993. Geology testing
was done in January 1994. An aerial view of the site is shown in
Figure~5. Including 0.3 acres of trees remaining to be cut around the
LBT site, the entire Mt. Graham International Observatory (3
telescopes, utility building and 2 mile access road) occupies a total
of 8.6 acres inside a 150 acre astrophysical preserve. Leveling of the
site and completion of the access road were delayed by a lawsuit
against the U. S. Forest Service in July 1994. Telescope opponents
objected that the site for LBT had been moved approximately 400 meters
in an attempt to minimize the impact of construction on some red
squirrels now living on a site which had been considered for the
Columbus Project prior to 1987. In 1995, the 9th Circuit Court in San
Francisco ruled that the Emerald Peak site was improperly approved by
the Forest Service --- i.e. that it was not included in the approval
of three telescopes granted by the Arizona-Idaho Conservation Act
passed by the U. S. Congress in 1988. A significant delay of two
construction seasons resulted because the site issues were
unresolved. In April 1996, the U. S. Congress once again passed
legislation indicating that LBT should be allowed to proceed with
construction on Emerald Peak. As of June 14, 1996, all the legal
obstacles have been cleared away and we are about to begin the
construction of the telescope and enclosure foundations.
View Figure 5 here
6.2 Summary of Mt. Graham Fire
Those of us with forested mountains in southern Arizona often look
enviously at the photographs of treeless Cerro Paranal shown by Massimo
Tarenghi in his presentation on the VLT. The trees have the effect of
raising the turbulent boundary layer from the ground to the top of the
tree canopy. This means that telescopes must be placed higher above
the ground to avoid the ground-layer seeing --- the elevation axis of
LBT is 30 meters above the ground. I joke that we have found
the solution to this problem of trees when the Clark Peak forest fire
started on Mt. Graham. The fire was about 6 km from the observatory
when it started on April 15, 1996. (The fire was human-caused, but
was not started by astronomers nor by opponents of the observatory as
far as I know.) The fire spread quickly due to the unusually dry
conditions exacerbated by minimal snowfall over the past winter. By
May 3, the main body of the fire approached the observatory site.
Flames reached within 200 meters of the existing telescopes, but
neither the Vatican Observatory15 1.8 meter optical telescope nor the
Hertz 10 meter submillimeter radio telescope (SMT) were damaged by the fire.
Thanks to a large protection effort mounted by the U. S. Forest
Service, local fire companies and the Mt. Graham International
Observatory staff. Some flames seen near the observatoy are shown
in Figure 6. The fire was finally contained on May 8, 1996.
Approximately 6500 acres were burned in total and 1100 persons were
eventually assigned to the fire fighting efforts.
View Figure 6 here
7. Primary Mirrors
7.1 Honeycomb Mirrors
The primary mirror blanks for LBT are of borosilicate honeycomb
construction developed by Angel and Hill. These blanks are being
produced at the Steward Observatory Mirror Lab at the University of
Arizona. Two 6.5 meter mirrors have previously been produced. The
details of the casting process have been described most recently by Olbert
et. al 16 . The mold is now under construction for the first of the
two 8.4 meter mirrors for LBT as shown in Figure 7. The casting of
the 8.4 meter blank is scheduled for the fall of 1996. Each mirror
has a finished diameter of 8417 mm and a clear optical aperture of
8408 mm. The mirrors are parabolic with a focal length of 9600 mm to
give a focal ratio of F/1.142. These will be the most aspheric large
telescope mirrors made to date. The mirrors have a central hole of
889 mm or an aperture around the hole of 898 mm. The cast honeycomb
structure has a 28 mm faceplate thickness and a 25 mm backplate
thickness with a total thickness at the edge of the plano-concave
blank of 894 mm. The mirrors weigh almost 16 metric tons each with the
internal honeycomb structure making them just over 20% of solid
density. Parodi et. al 17,18 describe the finite element
calculations used to design the support and handling systems of the
honeycomb mirrors.
These primary mirrors will be polished at the Steward Observatory
Mirror Lab using the techniques described by Martin et. al19. The
polishing of the first mirror should be completed in early 2000.
After the mirrors have been polished, they will be installed in the
mirror cells using a vacuum lifting system. The secondary mirrors
will also be polished at the Steward Observatory Mirror Lab using the
facilities described by Burge20.
7.2 Mirror Cells and Supports
The mirror cells protect the mirrors from harm and they support the
mirror against external forces using an active pnuematic support
system. The 8.4 meter mirrors have 160 axial, 104 lateral and 4
cross-lateral pnuematic supports. The position of the mirrors in the
telescope is controlled by a system of 6 fixed points. These
so-called ``hard points'' provide an adjustable kinematic mount for
each mirror while the weight of the mirror is supported by the
pnuematic force actuators. The hard points include breakaway mechanisms
so that they cannot apply excessive forces to the mirror if the
pnuematic system fails. The mirror cells also contain a series of
nozzles used to ventilate the borosilicate honeycomb structure with
air in order to maintain temperature equilibrium near ambient temperature.
This ventilation air is circulated in the cells by air entrainment
devices which we have come to call ``jet ejectors''. Miglietta et. al 21
and Gray et. al22 describe the details of the mirror cells and support
systems in more detail. The mirror cells also contribute mechanically
to the telescope structure and provide the lower section of a vacuum
chamber used to aluminize the mirrors in-situ on the telescope
structure.
8. Conclusions
The Large Binocular Telescope Project has survived the onslaught of:
- renegade Apaches*,
- extremist environmental protesters*,
- university administrators*,
- conservative governments*,
- liberal governments*,
- lawyers*,
- schedule slippages
- and forest fires.
And yet the project continues to survive and prosper:
- the telescope design is complete with resonant frequency > 8 Hz;
- the first 8.4 meter honeycomb primary mirror mold is under construction;
- the final enclosure design is in progress;
- construction on Mt. Graham is underway again as of June 1996.
At the present pace, first light with a single optical train is scheduled
for the year 2001. Second light with the full binocular optics should
happen one or two years later.
* Apologies to the vast majority of environmentalists, lawyers, Apaches,
conservatives, liberals and administrators that we consider to be our friends.
View Figure 7 here
9. References
- West, S. C.et. al, 1996,
``Toward First Light for the MMT 6.5-m telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Johns, M. 1996,
``Magellan 6.5 m Telescopes Project: status report'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Hill, J. M. 1990,
``Optical design, error budget and specifications for the Columbus Project
Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 1236, pp. 86-107.
- Hill, J. M. and Salinari, P. 1994,
``Optomechanics of the Large Binocular Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2199, pp. 64-75.
- Salinari, P. 1996,
``The Large Binocular Telescope interferometer'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Hill, J. M. 1994,
``Strategy for interferometry with the Large Binocular Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2200, pp. 248-259.
- Byard, P. and Bonaccini, D. 1994,
``Optical design for interferometry with the Large Binocular Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2200, pp. 446-457.
- Lloyd-Hart, M.,et. al 1996,
``Design of the 6.5m MMT adaptive optics system, and results from its
prototype system FASTTRAC II'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Bruns, D. G., Barrett, T. K., Sandler, D. G., Martin, H. M. and Brusa, G.et. al 1996,
``MMT adaptive secondary mirror concave prototype'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Salinari, P., Del~Vecchio, C. and Biliotti, V. 1993,
"A study of an adaptive secondary mirror", {Proc. ICO-16 Conference on
Active and Adaptive Optics, ed. F. Merkle, (Garching), p. 247.
- Gray, P. M., West, S. C. and Gallieni, W. 1996,
``Support and actuation of six secondaries for the 6.5m MMT and 8.4m LBT'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Del Vecchio, C., Davison, W. B., Gallieni, W., Rigato, G. and Miglietta, L. 1996,
``The mechanical structure of the Large Binocular Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Del Vecchio, C. 1996,
``Optimization of the elevation structure of the Large Binocular Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Salinari, P. and Hill, J. M. 1994,
``Enclosure of the Large Binocular Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2199, pp. 442-451.
- West, S. C., et. al1996,
``Progress at the Vatican Advanced Technology Telescope'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Olbert, B., Angel, J. R. P., Hill, J. M. and Hinman, S. F. 1994,
``Casting 6.5 meter mirrors for the MMT Conversion and Magellan'',
S.P.I.E., 2199, pp. 144-155.
- Parodi G., Hill J. M. and Salinari P. 1992,
``Supporting the 8.4m honeycomb mirrors of Columbus'',
Proceedings of the ESO Conference on Progress in Telescope and
Instrumentation Technologies, ed. M.-H. Ulrich, (Garching:ESO),
pp. 301-306.
- Parodi, G., Cerra, G. C., Hill, J. M., Davison, W. B. and Salinari, P. 1996,
``LBT primary mirrors: the final design of the supporting system'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
%19
- Martin, H. M., Burge, J. H., Ketelsen, D. A. and West, S. C. 1996,
``Fabrication of the 6.5m primary mirror for the Multiple Mirror Telescope Conversion'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Burge, J. H. 1996,
``Measurement of large convex secondary mirrors'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Miglietta, L., Gray, P., Gallieni, W. and Del~Vecchio, C. 1996,
``The final design of the Large Binocular Telescope M1 cells'',
S.P.I.E., 2871, (These Proceedings).
- Gray, P. M., Hill, J. M., Davison, W. B., Callahan,
S. P. and Williams, J. T. 1994,
``Support of large borosilicate honeycomb mirrors'',
S.P.I.E., 2199, pp. 691-702.