|
Description of UKIRT
A major component of the UKIRT Upgrades Programme was the
identification,
understanding, and where possible, control of "Facility Seeing" effects
generated by the telescope itself and its enclosure.
To attempt to understanding these effects required extensive
instrumentation of the telescope, in particular to determine air and
structural temperatures. Temperature probes are accordingly installed
in
avariety of locations. Their outputs can be examined
here. These include inside and outside air temperatures
(measured by carefully calibrated aspirating, radiation-shielded,
thermometers), mirror surface and air temperatures, truss steelwork
temperatures (used to correct focus changes with temperature) and
top-end
hub and air temperatures.
Robust measurements of pure
seeing effects are are a likely product of the the
autofocus
mode of the fast guider, in which the latter opperates in a mode
exactly
analogous to a Differential Image Motion mMonitor, or DIMM.
This is caused by the presence of warmer air inside the dome mixing
with
colder outside air, generally in the vicinity of the dome aperture.
Schlieren effects in the telescope beam, seen in short-exposure
pupil images using a knife-edge in the bottom-end wavefront sensor (WFS), demonstrated the
existence of turbulent shear between warm dome air and colder outside
air blowing
past in the wind. At UKIRT this has been addressed in two ways.
- The building is equipped with a powerful air-extractor system
which
draws ~10 dome volumes per hour through the plant room in the
basement (for cooling purposes) and vents this air through a tunnel.
This
can be set to draw directly from the external air or (most usually)
through the dome, thereby ensuring ~10 changes per hour. (If the
outside air is markedly warmer than that in the dome it may be
preferable
not to draw it inside.) The extracted air is drawn into the
coudé
room through floor apertures surrounding the north and south columns
and
in the centre of the floor.
- The dome is equipped with a Dome Ventilation System (DVS) of 16
weather-tight closeable apertures, each 1.8m square and equipped with a
roller door closure and horizontal louvres to direct the airflow
internally. In median Mauna Kea winds (~7 m/s) any two of these
flush ~65 dome volumes per hour through the telescope environment.
The open DVS can be well seen in
this image.
This is caused by the surrounding air being cooler than the primary
mirror, which then generates rising convection currents when the
airflow near the mirror is slow-moving.
The occurrence of mirror seeing was demonstrated in 1993 by
examining the
dispersion of Zernike
terms (i.e., the main aberrations), in
repetitive sets of WFS measures. Their RMS got larger as exposures were
reduced, even at constant S/N, demonstrating that the effect was one of
seeing.The RMS also reduced when the telescope was pointed away from
the
zenith, as would be expected if it was caused by convection currents
rising from the primary mirror. Finally the RMS was markedly reduced by
blowing dome air over the primary mirror with a fan, so as to remove
the (relatively slow) convection currents completely.
On UKIRT two measures have been undertaken to reduce mirror seeing.
- The louvres in the lower halves of the DVS apertures (which are
~4.5 m above the primary mirror: see
figure ) are tilted so as to direct the
wind-driven
airflow downwards towards the mirror. As a result, in moderate (>10
mph) east and west winds a marked breeze can be felt at floor level and
convection from the primary mirror is expected to be removed.
- The primary mirror has been also equipped with a cooling and
ventilation system. 5 kW of cooling power is provided by a chiller in
the
plant room and conveyed to the mirror cell by a glycol circulation
system.
This feeds a heat exchanger which is used to cool air drawn in and
circulated by a powerful low-vibration axial fan. The cooled air passes
into a plenum and thence through outward-directed radial nozzles around
the inner periphery of the mirror, 15 over the optical surface, and six
under the lower surface. During the day this air is confined inside the
mirror skirt and protective covers and is expected to be able to cool
the
mirror by ~4°C in a ten-hour day.
- If the mirror nevertheless does get warmer than the ambient air
the
cooling system makes it possible to neutralise the heat injected by the
axial fan and to ventilate the upper surface with air at ambient
temperature.
At the time of writing the mirror cooling system is undergoing
checkout
and initial fault correction. In operation it is intended to keep the
mirror cooler than the dome ambient air as much of the time as
possible,
bearing in mind the risk of forming ice on its surface. Clearly the
temperature will be kept above the dew-point as much as possible
(heating
is also available against condensation problems).
These are caused by individual objects which are warmer or cooler then
the surrounding air, and thereby generate convection currents.
Typical local heat sources are electrical power supplies, which in
UKIRT's case release about 1,200 W below the mirror cell. As a result a
rising plume is sometimes observed in the central hole. Local heat
sources are normally diluted into insignificance (except from the point
of view of the overall dome air thermal budget) by brisk ventilation;
electronics cabinets are equipped with effective exhaust fans to
promote
immediate dilution of the warm exhaust air.
The largest local heat source is the topend itself, which is heated
during the day, mainly by radiation from the inside of the upper dome
which can reach 30°C. The excess temperature of the steelwork over
the ambient air early in the night can reach 12°C; circulating air
thought the upper dome using fans on the South Col was found to reduce
this by a third. Experiments are proceeding with the goal of doubling
this effect.
Conversely, in light winds the topend hub can cool by
radiation to
space until it is several degrees colder than its surroundings.
Schlieren
images have in the past shown of a plume of colder air
descending from the old (pre-upgrade) top-end hub. The effect has been
minimised in the new topend, which is painted with Lo-Mit proprietary
low-emissivity paint.
Many telescope domes are painted white, which rejects sunlight and
emits
in the infrared, thus reducing day-time heating. At night, however, the
white paint supercools efficiently and these telescopes must contend
with
negative plumes of cold air falling from the sides of their dome
shutters
into the dome. Such plumes have never been observed at UKIRT, probably
because the dome is of unpainted aluminium, with properties
rather similar to Lo-Mit, and supercooling is therefore much less
dramatic than for a white-painted (high-emissivity) dome.
|