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I.INTRODUCTIONSolar Probe Plus (SPP) is a NASA mission developed to visit and study the sun closer than ever before. SPP is designed to orbit as close as 7 million km (9.86 solar radii) from Sun center. One of its instruments: WISPR (Wide-Field Imager for Solar Probe Plus) will be the first ‘local’ imager to provide the relation between the large-scale corona and the in-situ measurements. The stray light rejection is critical for the imaging instrument. The Centre Spatial de Liège in Belgium (CSL) owns a stray light test facility for In Field and Out of Field of View stray light measurements. This facility is updated to realize a stray light test on the WISPR Development Model (DM). The design of the WISPR is based on a series of baffles used to reduce the scattered light from the solar disk and reflections from the spacecraft to levels below the scene brightness. Average predicted stray light: <2×10-9 B/Bs @ 9.86Rs and <2×10-12 B/Bs @ 0.25AU, well below the K+F corona [2]. The theoretical performances of the baffling systems have been experimentally verified at CSL during the instrument development phase of WISPR. Two main requests have been checked: II.WIDE-FIELD IMAGER FOR SOLAR PROBE PLUS DEVELOPMENT MODELWISPR is designed, developed and will be operated by the Solar & Heliospheric Physics Branch at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). The WISPR instrument concept is based on the SECCHI/HI and SoloHI design. It consists of two-telescope, the inner telescope extending from 13.5° to 53° and the outer telescope extending from 50° to 108°. The two-telescope implementation is necessary because FIELDS antennas are located in front of WISPR (just behind the heat shield) and with a single telescope, two of the antennas would intrude into the unobstructed FOV of the lens leading to unacceptable stray light levels (Fig.1). WISPR uses the Thermal Protection System (heat shield) as the first occulter (Fig.1). The mechanical design incorporates three baffle systems (forward, interior, and peripheral). A set of forward baffles (F1-F3) are located on a ledge to reduce the diffraction from the heat shield. An internal baffle assembly (I1-I7) reduces this stray light component further as well as stray light diffracted from the Fields antennas and other spacecraft structures. The peripheral baffles limit stray light from surrounding spacecraft surfaces entering the interior baffle cavity and reaching the detectors (Fig.2). The Development Model (DM) of WISPR is realized to verify experimentally the stray light model. The baffles are representative of the instrument (Fig.3). III.STRAY LIGHT FACILITY DESCRIPTIONThe facility is in a clean room (class 100) to eliminate undesired air particles scatter light sources. The chamber was closed but at atmospheric pressure. Inside the chamber dedicated baffles are implemented to eliminate undesired light generated by the set up itself e.g retroreflected light away from the instrument under test. The WISPR DM is set in the vacuum chamber inside a black tent. A general overview is given in Fig.4. The facility consists in the following items:
A.The vacuum chamberThe setup is implemented in a facility consisting of a main chamber (diameter 3m, height 2.8m, vertical axis) and an auxiliary chamber (diameter 1.2m, length 5m, horizontal axis). B.The collimatorThe collimator is set into the auxiliary chamber and has a 400mm off axis parabola (OAP). The off axis design suppresses the problem of stray light generated by the internal obstruction. The goal of the truss is to support the primary mirror (OAP), the fold mirror and the Focal Plane assembly (FPA) (Fig. 5). The truss is in stainless steel and is black painted with MAP PU1. C.The source pack with its monitoringThe light source is either a Laser-Driven white Light Source (LDLS) or a 20W laser diode (λc = 805 nm) equipped with an optical fiber. The source baffling has 2 main objectives (Fig.6):
or the remaining backscattered light if, any pyramid in black glass is placed around the source pinhole. The top of the pyramid has a hole of 400 μm. The pyramid shape is designed to reflect the ~4% specular reflected beam in the cylinder light trap. The cylinder around the pyramid is designed as a light trap such that no stray light is coming out the baffle. Black coating from Acktar is used for baffles and internal aperture stop. The aperture stop limits the collimator Φ number (Φ 300 mm) such as no black surface in directly viewed by the instrument is luminated (mirror cell, vanes…) An additional reflective fiber to fiber coupler allows to insert optical density for decreasing light flux or filters for selecting the wavelength. The monitoring is placed into the collimated beam. It consists into a fold mirror, a collecting lens and a photodiode. D.The Mechanical Ground Support Equipment (MGSE)The purpose of the MGSE is to locate the instrument in correct orientation with respect to the collimated beam. The MGSE orients the instrument in the range ± 180° in azimuth and -5°/+85° in elevation. The WISPR DM is mounted onto a stack of stages (Fig. 7): E.The baffles designOne of the most critical parts in the design of the stray light facility is to get rid of all internal stray light coming from reflection of the chamber wall or retro reflection from the tested item. To limit this stray light, it is proposed to place the WISPR DM in a black tent. Additionally a DM baffle around of the entrance aperture is set to avoid back reflection to the focal plane (Fig. 8). Velblack is added in critical part. The collimator baffling is divided in two parts: IV.TEST DESCRIPTIONA.Principle of the testThe principle of this test is to illuminate the WISPR DM with collimated light from directions of stray-light sources. The residual light entering the telescope aperture is recorded with a GSE camera. The recorded image is then compared to a simulated image obtained from ray-tracing analysis. Because there are two telescopes, the same test is repeated on both telescopes with the same GSE camera. The stray-light sources have been determined by the NRL and come from the surrounding structures (FIELDS antenna …), diffracted light due to the solar illumination and scene background (F corona, stars and planets). C.Test sequence overviewThe test sequence is represented Fig. 10. The outer telescope aperture is larger than the GSE camera aperture. The mating holes for the GSE camera are oblong to allow shifting the aperture on the edges and the corners of the entrance aperture; two positions of the camera have been tested. V.RESULTSA.Facility and camera AIVAll GSE are positioned and aligned with a laser tracker and theodolite. The optical performances of the collimator are characterized. That concerns:
The flat field of the optics (including camera, objective and relay optic) is measured with a spectralon integrating sphere. The integrating sphere is illuminated by the LDLS or by the laser diode through an optical fiber. The Fig 11 shows a typical acquisition for the camera before and after flat field correction. B.CalibrationThe radiometric calibration objective is to calibrate the collimated flux with the camera response. A Spectralon plate is set into the collimated beam and the camera is looking to the Spectralon (Fig. 12). The picture presented in Fig.13 is realized with the LDLS. The same measurement has been realized with the laser diode light source. The results are presented in Table 1. Table 1.Photometric calibration results
C.Optical measurementDistortion:The camera distortion is tested at system level during stray light test by scanning the camera FOV along azimuth without occulter. Fig. 14 shows typical collimator spots during the scanning of the FOV. The variation of the spot centroid with respect to the centre of the FOV is plotted in Fig 15. The distortion is lower than ±0.6 px along a 40° field of view. Line of SightThe distortion FOV scan allows to determine the angular deviation of the central pixel in azimuth. An optimization with elevation angle allows centering the PSF on the central pixel in order to know the exact optical axis deviation with respect to the WISPR reference. Stray Light measurementsA large number of angles haven been measured to verify the stray light due to the reflection and scattering of structures surrounding WISPR. All illumination angles are determined by the NRL. A short analysis is realised at CSL in order to verify the facility background level but the data processing has been made by NRL to realize the correlation between the numerical model of WISPR and observed stray light measurements. Two configurations are shown in this document. The Fig 16 and Table 2 summarize the D1 configuration acquisition in inner telescope configuration. The “D” configuration corresponds of orientation for diffraction analysis. Four angles have been checked concerning the diffraction analysis, D1 is the first one. The Fig 17 and Table 3 summarize the HS5 configuration acquisition with the outer telescope. The “HS” configuration corresponds of the Heat Shield verification. Four angles have been checked concerning the Heat Shield verification. HS5 is the last one. Table 2.D1 in inner configuration
Table 3.HS5 in outer configuration
VI.CONCLUSIONSThe control of stray light due to spacecraft accommodations has been the major focus of the WISPR team during the preliminary design phase of the project. The verification of baffles design has been realized at CSL on the Development Model (WISPR DM). The CSL facility has been able to realize stray light test for in-field and out-field of view. During the test, the facility stray light is lower than 10-10. The correlation between the numerical model of WISPR and observed stray light measurements has been realized by the NRL. The numerical model is consistent with the experimental results. VII.ACKNOWLEDGMENTSThis development would not have been possible without the help of the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO). VIII.VIII.REFERENCEE. Mazy, Y. Stockman, M.L. Hellin,
“Design and modelisation of a stray light facility for space optical instrument,”
in SPIE Optical Systems Design 2012,
(2012). Google Scholar
A. Vourlidas,
“The Wide-Field Imager for Solar Probe Plus (WISPR),”
Space Science Reviews,
(2015). Google Scholar
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