From the article...
Asteroid-hunting telescope in the repair shop
Rachel Courtland
NewScientist
01 October 2009
The first of the asteroid-hunting Pan-STARRS telescopes will be taken apart today in an effort to solve problems with image quality.
The 1.8-metre PS1 telescope is the first of a a suite of instruments - Movie Camera – the Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System – designed to find asteroids and comets with orbits that could bring them close to Earth. Sited atop a volcano on the Hawaiian island of Maui, PS1 is the prototype for a planned four telescopes that will image the whole sky visible from Hawaii three times each month.
To scan so much sky, PS1 boasts a 1.4-billion-pixel digital camera and specially designed software to process the terabytes of data collected by the telescope each night.
But since the camera was installed in 2007, the telescope team has been struggling to get PS1's image quality to its targeted level. "There have been problems that we just didn't anticipate," says Pan-STARRS principal investigator Nick Kaiser of the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
Big bananas
PS1's first problem was a misalignment of the optics. "When we switched the telescope on two years ago we had terrible-looking images. We could get sort-of round stars in the middle of the field, but they were big and fuzzy. But the stars at ends of the field looked like telephone handles or big bananas," Kaiser told New Scientist.
That problem was quickly fixed, but the images PS1 is taking are still 40 to 50 per cent fuzzier than they are supposed to be. "We're spending half our time doing mediocre science and half our time trying to improve it so we can do great science," says PS1's director, Ken Chambers, a colleague of Kaiser at Manoa.
The main culprit now seems to be a set of 18 rods that hold up the telescope's secondary mirror. These rods connect to motors that adjust the mirror to counteract distortions of the telescope, which expands and contracts due to temperature changes and sags slightly as it scans across the sky.
These rods are not as rigidly mounted as they should be owing to a flaw in the original design, says Kaiser. So on Thursday a crew will remove the secondary mirror to replace parts of the support structure. The telescope is expected to be offline for several weeks, but if all goes well the procedure should go a long way toward improving the telescope's image quality.
High hopes
The US air force has invested some $60 million in Pan-STARRS for research and development and to build PS1. A second telescope is now under construction.
Kaiser says the team hopes to run PS1 for three-and-a-half years on the summit of the Haleakala volcano in Maui, then move it to Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii in 2012 to join three other Pan-STARRS telescopes.
When complete, Pan-STARRS should be able to detect objects 100 times fainter than those spotted by current surveys, including 99 per cent of any asteroids 300 metres across or larger that come near Earth's orbit. The data will also be used for other investigations, ranging from the stellar structure of the Milky Way to the effects of dark energy.
Link: NewScientist Article
This area will cover relevant news of the threat to the planet from Near Earth Objects (NEOs) including concepts and designs for mitigation. All opinions are those of the author.
01 October 2009
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given the deadlines in the posting on the panstarrs web site PS1 should be in the testing phase for the rod repairs.
ReplyDeleteWith the launch and imminent first light from the WISE infrared survey telescope it is pretty important to get panstarrs up and running right away. the Wise data will be MUCH more useful if we can manage to get concurrently ( or close to concurrent) images from ground based telescopes operating at visible wavelengths. panstarrs can image the many of the same asterods and possbily brown dwarfs that show up in the wiase "thermal" images, but at higher resolution, they can then track these objects motion on roughly a weekly basis.
according to the Panstarrs website the repairs should be complete and the PS1 should be in the testing mode. In my opinion, it is important to accomplish this quickly. the WISE infrared survey is starting very soon as they are testing that orbital telescope in January. the program will only last about 11 months. Concurrent images form Panstarrs would greatly help sort out the data from WISE, and weekly tracking of the asteroids and putative brown dwarfs ( with large proper motions) would really help verify their discovery.
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