AAS 205th Meeting, 9-13 January 2005
Session 131 The Deep Dark Universe
Oral, Wednesday, January 12, 2005, 2:00-3:30pm, Royal Palm 4-6

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[131.03] SNAP Telescope Latest Developments

M. Lampton (U.C.Berkeley), SNAP Collaboration

The coming era of precision cosmology imposes new demands on space telescopes with regard to spectrophotometric accuracy and image stability. To meet these requirements for SNAP we have developed an all reflecting two-meter-class space telescope of the three-mirror anastigmat type. Our design features a large flat annular field (1.5 degrees = 580mm diameter) and a telephoto advantage of 6, delivering a 22m focal length within an optical package length of only 3.5 meters. The use of highly stable materials (Corning ULE glass and carbon-fiber reinforced cyanate ester resin for the metering structure) combined with agressive distributed thermal control and an L2 orbit location will lead to unmatched figure stability. Owing to our choice of rigid structure with nondeployable solar panels, finite-element models show no structural resonances below 10Hz. An exhaustive stray light study has been completed. Beginning in 2005, two industry studies will develop plans for fabrication, integration and test, bringing SNAP to a highly realistic level of definition. SNAP is supported by the Office of Science, US DoE, under contract DE-AC03-76SF00098.


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The author(s) of this abstract have provided an email address for comments about the abstract: mlampton@SSL.berkeley.edu

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© 2004. The American Astronomical Society.