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Published July 6, 2018 | Published
Book Section - Chapter Open

JWST mirror and actuator performance at cryo-vacuum

Abstract

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) telescope's Secondary Mirror Assembly (SMA) and eighteen Primary Mirror Segment Assemblies (PMSAs) are each actively controlled in rigid body position via six hexapod actuators. Each of the PMSAs additionally has a radius of curvature actuator. The mirrors are stowed to the mirror support structure to survive the launch environment and then must be deployed 12.5 mm to reach the nominally deployed position before the Wavefront Sensing & Control (WFSC) alignment and phasing process begins. JWST requires testing of the full optical system in a Cryogenic Vacuum (CV) environment before launch. The cryo vacuum test campaign was executed in Chamber A at the Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston Texas. The test campaign consisted of an ambient vacuum test, a cooldown test, a cryo stable test at 65 Kelvin, a warmup test, and finally a second ambient vacuum test. Part of that test campaign was the functional and performance testing of the hexapod actuators on the flight mirrors. This paper will describe the testing that was performed on all 132 hexapod and radius of curvature actuators. The test campaign first tests actuators individually then tested how the actuators perform in the hexapod system. Telemetry from flight sensors on the actuators and measurements from external metrology devices such as interferometers, photogrammetry systems and image analysis was used to demonstrate the performance of the JWST actuators. The mirror move commanding process was exercised extensively during the JSC CV test and many examples of accurately commanded moves occurred. The PMSA and SMA actuators performed extremely well during the JSC CV test, and we have demonstrated that the actuators are fully functional both at ambient and cryo temperatures and that the mirrors will go to their commanded positions with the accuracy needed to phase and align the telescope.

Additional Information

© 2018 Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). The James Webb Space Telescope project is an international collaboration led by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD. Ball Aerospace would like to acknowledge and thank NASA for their leadership, funding, and support during the testing and analysis of the OTIS cryogenic testing campaign. We would also like to thank the many individuals, companies, and government institutions not previously identified who supported the integration and testing effort of the OTIS at both Goddard Space Flight Center and Johnson Space Center.

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August 19, 2023
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