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The versatile CubeSat Telescope: going to large apertures in small spacecraft

Authors :
Victor Gasho
Kerry L. Gonzales
Kevin Z. Derby
Paul Serra
Ewan S. Douglas
Corwynn Sauve
Jaren N. Ashcraft
George A. Smith
Kerri Cahoy
Charlotte E. Guthery
Daewook Kim
Tom Connors
Geon Hee Kim
Source :
UV/Optical/IR Space Telescopes and Instruments: Innovative Technologies and Concepts X.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SPIE, 2021.

Abstract

The design of a CubeSat telescope for academic research purposes must balance complicated optical and structural designs with cost to maximize performance in extreme environments. Increasing the CubeSat size (eg. 6U to 12U) will increase the potential optical performance, but the cost will increase in kind. Recent developments in diamond-turning have increased the accessibility of aspheric aluminum mirrors, enabling a cost-effective regime of well-corrected nanosatellite telescopes. We present an all-aluminum versatile CubeSat telescope (VCT) platform that optimizes performance, cost, and schedule at a relatively large 95 mm aperture and 0.4 degree diffraction limited full field of view stablized by MEMS fine-steering modules. This study features a new design tool that permits easy characterization of performance degradation as a function of spacecraft thermal and structural disturbances. We will present details including the trade between on- and off-axis implementations of the VCT, thermal stability requirements and finite-element analysis, and launch survival considerations. The VCT is suitable for a range of CubeSat borne applications, which provides an affordable platform for astronomy, Earth-imaging, and optical communications.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, published in Optical Engineering + Applications conference in SPIE Optics + Photonics San Diego 2021

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
UV/Optical/IR Space Telescopes and Instruments: Innovative Technologies and Concepts X
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ada2610427e1b33ce152c3e86701075
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2594884