Home >> Tech Briefs >> Materials >> Designs and Materials for Better Coronagraph Occulting Masks
Designs and Materials for Better Coronagraph Occulting Masks
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California
Friday, January 01 2010
advertisement:
Optical density and phase
profiles are achromatized
over a broad wavelength
range.
New designs, and materials appropriate
for such designs, are under
investigation in an effort to develop
coronagraph occulting masks having
broad-band spectral characteristics
superior to those currently employed.
These designs and materials are applicable
to all coronagraphs, both
ground-based and spaceborne. This
effort also offers potential benefits for
the development of other optical
masks and filters that are required (1)
for precisely tailored spatial transmission
profiles, (2) to be characterized by optical-density neutrality and phase neutrality (that is, to
be characterized by constant optical density and constant
phase over broad wavelength ranges), and/or (3) not to
exhibit optical-density-dependent phase shifts.
The need for this effort arises for the following reasons:
Coronagraph occulting masks are required to impose, on
beams of light transmitted through them, extremely precise
control of amplitude and phase according to carefully
designed transmission profiles.
In the original application that gave rise to this effort, the
concern has been to develop broad-band occulting masks
for NASA’s Terrestrial Planet Finder coronagraph. Until
now, experimental samples of these masks have been made
from high-energy-beam-sensitive (HEBS) glass, which
becomes locally dark where irradiated with a high-energy
electron beam, the amount of darkening depending on the
electron-beam energy and dose. Precise mask profiles have
been written on HEBS glass blanks by use of electron
beams, and the masks have performed satisfactorily in
monochromatic light. However, the optical-density and
phase profiles of the HEBS masks vary significantly with
wavelength; consequently, the HEBS masks perform unsatisfactorily
in broad-band light.
Thin Metal and Dielectric Films would be deposited on a glass substrate.Their thicknesses would be stepped to obtain a specified spatial transmissionprofile with a uniform phase profile. This drawing is simplified and isnot to scale.
The key properties of materials to be used in coronagraph
occulting masks are their extinction coefficients, their indices
of refraction, and the variations of these parameters with
wavelength. The effort thus far has included theoretical predictions
of performances of masks that would be made from
alternative materials chosen because the wavelength dependences
of their extinction coefficients and their indices of
refraction are such that that the optical-density and phase
profiles of masks made from these materials can be expected
to vary much less with wavelength than do those of masks
made from HEBS glass. The alternative materials considered
thus far include some elemental metals such as Pt and Ni,
metal alloys such as Inconel, metal nitrides such as TiN, and
dielectrics such as SiO2.
A mask as now envisioned would include thin metal and dielectric
films having stepped or smoothly varying thicknesses (see figure).
The thicknesses would be chosen, taking account of the
indices of refraction and extinction coefficients, to obtain an
acceptably close approximation of the desired spatial transmittance
profile with a flat phase profile.
This work was done by Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian of
Caltech for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. For more information,
contact
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
.
NPO-44461
Subscribe today to receive the INSIDER, a FREE e-mail newsletter from NASA Tech Briefs featuring exclusive previews of upcoming articles, late breaking NASA and industry news, hot products and design ideas, links to online resources, and much more.