The present invention relates to optical arrangements and, in particular, it concerns a Cassegrain optical system.
It is known to employ a Cassegrain telescope with various focal geometries. In some cases, an optical path of the twice-reflected light from the Cassegrain telescope passes out through an axial opening in the primary mirror. In other cases, a beam-folding reflector is used to provide a laterally-deflected beam, sometimes referred to as a Cassegrain-Nasmyth arrangement. In certain cases, where dual-channel multi-spectral imaging is required, a dichroic beam-folding reflector may be used to split incident light into two separate channels of different spectral bands for imaging according to both of the above geometries. One example of such an arrangement, as disclosed by US pre-grant publication no. US 2013/0105695, is illustrated in
The tilted dichroic mirror (230) of the aforementioned publication separates the two channels to create a Cassegrain-Nasmyth architecture for the visible channel and a conventional Cassegrain arrangement for the IR channel. Transmission of the IR channel through the inclined plate of the dichroic mirror causes an optical distortion to the IR channel. Partial compensation for this distortion is achieved by employing a reverse-tilted window (310), but this element does not fully compensate for the distortion and is sensitive to misalignment and tolerances of its optical components. Furthermore, design and manufacture of a tilted dichroic reflector is complicated and tend to induce additional losses to the optical path.
The present invention is a Cassegrain optical system.
According to the teachings of an embodiment of the present invention there is provided, a Cassegrain optical system comprising: (a) a concave primary mirror deployed for receiving incident electromagnetic radiation and generating once-reflected rays; (b) a convex secondary mirror deployed for receiving the once-reflected rays and generating twice-reflected rays; (c) a tertiary reflector deployed for receiving the twice-reflected rays and generating thrice-reflected rays; and (d) a beam-folding optical element deployed between the primary mirror and the secondary mirror for deflecting the thrice-reflected rays laterally so as to exit a volume between the primary and secondary mirrors.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the primary mirror, the secondary mirror and the tertiary reflector are symmetrical about a shared primary optical axis of the system.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the tertiary reflector is deployed axisymmetrically to a primary optical axis of the system.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the beam-folding optical element is deployed within a central shadow of the once-reflected rays from the primary mirror.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the beam-folding optical element is deployed within a central shadow of the twice-reflected rays reflected from the primary mirror and the secondary mirror.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the tertiary reflector is a dichroic optical element deployed to reflect a first spectral channel towards the beam-folding optical element and to transmit a second spectral channel.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the first spectral channel is within the infrared band and the second spectral channel includes at least part of the visible light band.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, there is also provided an infrared imaging system including a focal plane array sensor deployed in optical alignment with the beam-folding reflector, and a visible light imaging system including at least one focal plane array sensor deployed in optical alignment for receiving the twice-reflected rays transmitted by the dichroic optical element.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the first and second spectral channels do not pass through any common refractive component other than a window or dome without optical power encountered by the incident electromagnetic radiation before reaching the concave primary mirror.
According to a further feature of an embodiment of the present invention, the secondary mirror is supported by an actuator arrangement which forms part of an image stabilization system.
The invention is herein described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The present invention is a Cassegrain optical system.
The principles and operation of optical systems according to the present invention may be better understood with reference to the drawings and the accompanying description.
Referring now to the drawings,
The primary mirror 310 and the secondary mirror 320 preferably constitute a basic Cassegrain architecture. The terms “Cassegrain architecture”, “Cassegrain optics” or “Cassegrain telescope” are used herein generically to refer to any of the family of optical arrangements employing a concave primary mirror and a convex secondary mirror to provide part of a folded-optical-path telescope, independent of the exact mirror type (spherical, parabolic, hyperbolic or other) and focal geometry. In this architecture, the secondary mirror, together with any associated baffles or other structures, creates a central obscuration of the entrance pupil. As a result, no light illuminates the central section of the secondary mirror as shown in
In a case where the secondary mirror is off-center relative to the optical entrance pupil but still obscures part of the entrance pupil, an off-axis section of the secondary mirror will not be illuminated (much like 400 in
In most preferred embodiments of this invention, the folding mirror 350 is positioned in the non-illuminated central section and hence causes no additional obscuration, as shown in
It will be appreciated that the arrangement of
The two-channel arrangements of the present invention may be used to implement multi-spectral imaging with a wide range of pairs of spectral bands separated by a suitably chosen dichroic optical element 330 and subsequently focused by suitable optics on suitable detectors. Two-channel implementations of the invention may be applied essentially to any pair of wavelength bands between 0.35 and 15 microns wavelength. By way of non-limiting examples, possible pairs of wavelength bands for which the present invention may be used to advantage include, but are not limited to, the following examples:
In one particularly advantageous subset of embodiments, where one channel is used for IR radiation in the 3400 to 15000 nanometer wavelength, the longer internal optical path of the reflected channel may be used to advantage for the thermal IR channel, with the entrance pupil imaged onto the cold shield 430 before being imaged on the detector plane 440. The transmitted channel in the embodiment illustrated here is focused directly onto the sensor located at plane 420, which is appropriate, for example, for non-thermal radiation (in the wavelength range of 350 to 2500 nanometers) since it doesn't require a cold shield. It should be noted however that reverse configurations, with the transmitted optical path employed for thermal IR imaging, may also be used, all according to the requirements of each given application.
In certain preferred implementations, the two channels depicted in
A particular advantage of certain configurations of the present invention is that use of a suitable drive mechanism as part of an image stabilization arrangement associated with secondary mirror 320 allows for accurate stabilization and/or back-scan for both channels (for sensor 420 and for 440) simultaneously using a single stabilization arrangement.
In certain preferred implementations, the optics of the reflected channel that receives the laterally-deflected light from beam-folding optical element 350 partially obscures the incoming light beam, as illustrated by elements 520 in
Thus, in summary, certain embodiments of the present invention provide a Cassegrain optical system which has a concave primary mirror deployed for receiving incident electromagnetic radiation and generating once-reflected rays, a convex secondary mirror deployed for receiving the once-reflected rays and generating twice-reflected rays, a tertiary reflector deployed for receiving the twice-reflected rays and generating thrice-reflected rays, and a beam-folding optical element deployed between the primary mirror and the secondary mirror for deflecting the thrice-reflected rays laterally so as to exit a volume between the primary and secondary mirrors.
In a first set of particularly preferred implementations, the primary mirror, the secondary mirror and the tertiary reflector are symmetrical about a shared primary optical axis of the system.
The tertiary reflector is, in certain particularly preferred implementations, deployed axisymmetrically to a primary optical axis of the system. The tertiary reflector may be a planar reflector, or may be shaped to provide any desired optical power as part of the overall optical arrangement.
The beam-folding optical element is preferably deployed in a central shadow cast by the secondary mirror or other components of the assembly in the once-reflected rays from the primary mirror, and most preferably in a central shadow in the twice-reflected rays reflected from the primary mirror and the secondary mirror.
For two-channel (multi-spectral) imaging, the tertiary reflector is preferably a dichroic beam-splitting optical element, such as a dichroic reflector, deployed to reflect a first spectral channel towards the beam-folding optical element and to transmit a second spectral channel, with or without refractive optical power. In one particularly preferred implementation, the first spectral channel is within the infrared band, most preferably, within a range of thermal radiation imaging, and the second spectral channel includes at least part of the visible light band. In that case, an infrared imaging system including a focal plane array sensor is preferably deployed in optical alignment with the beam-folding reflector, and a visible light imaging system including at least one focal plane array sensor is preferably deployed in optical alignment for receiving the twice-reflected rays transmitted by the dichroic beam-splitting optical element.
In certain particularly preferred implementations, the first and second spectral channels do not pass through any common refractive component other than a window or dome without optical power which is encountered by the incident electromagnetic radiation before reaching the concave primary mirror. A window or dome located prior to the first converging optical element does not typically introduce problems of spectral dispersion. The exclusive use of reflective optics for all shared optical components beyond the window or dome according to this option avoids spectral dispersion, rendering the device advantageous for multi-spectral imaging for pairs of widely spaced wavelengths.
In various particularly preferred implementations, the secondary mirror is supported by an actuator arrangement which forms part of an image stabilization system.
It will be appreciated that the above descriptions are intended only to serve as examples, and that many other embodiments are possible within the scope of the present invention as defined in the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IL16/50034 | 1/13/2016 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62110650 | Feb 2015 | US |