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Proceedings Paper

The architecture of the active surface control system of the Large Millimeter Telescope
Author(s): Kamal Souccar; Gary Wallace; Ron Grosslein; F. Peter Schloerb
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Paper Abstract

One of the fundamental design principles of the LMT is that its segmented primary surface must be active: the position and orientation of each of the segments must be moved in order to maintain the precise parabolic surface that is required by the specifications. Consequently, a system of actuators, one at the corner of each segment, is used to move the segments to counteract surface deformations attributed to gravity or thermal effects.

A new control system was designed and built within the project to implement an active surface at the LMT. The technical concept for the active surface control system is to provide a set of bus boxes with built-in control and I/O capabilities to run four actuators each. Bus boxes read the LVDT sensor position and limit switch status for each actuator and use this information to drive the actuator’s DC motor, closing the position loop. Each bus box contains a DC power supply for the electronics, a second DC power supply for the motors, an embedded controller with I/O to close the position loop, and a custom printed circuit board to condition the LVDT signals and drive the motors. An interface printed circuit board resides in each actuator providing a single connector access to the LVDT, the motor, and the limit switches. During the fall of 2013, 84 bus boxes were commissioned to control the 336 actuators of the inner three rings of the telescope. The surface correction model was determined using holography measurements and the active surface system has been in regular use during the scientific observation at the LMT.

Paper Details

Date Published: 28 July 2014
PDF: 6 pages
Proc. SPIE 9151, Advances in Optical and Mechanical Technologies for Telescopes and Instrumentation, 91512J (28 July 2014); doi: 10.1117/12.2057268
Show Author Affiliations
Kamal Souccar, Large Millimeter Telescope, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst (United States)
Gary Wallace, Large Millimeter Telescope, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst (United States)
Ron Grosslein, Large Millimeter Telescope, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst (United States)
F. Peter Schloerb, Large Millimeter Telescope, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst (United States)


Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 9151:
Advances in Optical and Mechanical Technologies for Telescopes and Instrumentation
Ramón Navarro; Colin R. Cunningham; Allison A. Barto, Editor(s)

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