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Toulouse, France 14–17 October 2008 Edited by Josiane Costeraste, Errico Armandillo, and Nikos Karafolas 1.INTRODUCTIONThe BepiColombo Laser altimeter (BELA) has the objective to measure the surface topology of the planet Mercury. The solar flux at Mercury Perihelion reaches 14,448 W m-2, which is about 10 times that of the flux at the Earth. These high thermal loads require good heat protection of the instrument. The Laser Altimeter Receiver will be equipped with a reflective baffle in order to limit the solar power impact. The interior surfaces of the baffle are specular reflective. The design uses a Stavroudis geometry [1] with alternating elliptical and hyperbolic vanes to reflect all incoming radiation at angles >38° back into space. The optical stray-light performance for the undeformed baffle has recently been assessed with forward and backward ray-tracing [2]. The baffle itself is exposed to heavy thermal loads leading to thermo-elastic distortions. The investigation of different geometry surfaces for modelling these distortions and their effect on the optical performance is subject of this paper. 2.MODEL GEOMETRYThe deformed baffle geometry was calculated with a finite element (FE) element model in NASTRAN, and the resulting specular stray-light performance was assessed by ray-tracing with the optical software ASAP. Six elliptical and five hyperbolical segments are arranged in a Stavroudis geometry, whose focal points lie in the entrance plane of the baffle [3]. For the ideal undeformed baffle shape, all incoming radiation at angles >38° is reflected back into space. There is also a front ring for further thermal protection. The ring is included in the model, as it might be “seen” by reflected rays. A ray-trace for the baffle is shown in Fig. 1. The original shape can be modeled by surfaces of revolution that are rotationally symmetric. The thermal loads of the solar radiation lead to structural deformation and hence loss of symmetry. A new surface geometry has to be found to model the deformed baffle shape and assess the optical performance. The mechanical distortions in the thermo-elastic FE model have to be imported into the optical model. The distortions are both in axial and radial directions, which makes the use of polynomial functions difficult. Conventional interfaces, such as Zernike surface fitting, fail to provide a proper import of the mechanical distortions into optical models. We have studied the baffle performance for geometry models with rational Bezier splines as free- form surface representations and compared them to a more simple modeling approach with straight segments. 3.STRAIGHT SEGMENT MODELThe baffle geometry is modelled by rings in the radial direction that are connected by straight segments in the axial direction (along the optical axis). The rings are divided into grid points (nodes) to generate a mesh that can be used in the FE model in NASTRAN and in the optical model in ASAP. The geometry is defined, such that
4.FREE-FORM SURFACESA model with parametric surfaces has been built from Rational Bezier Spline curves: The points P0 and P2 are the respective start point and the end point of a segment. When t runs from 0 to 1, P(t) traces out a line segment between P0 and P2. The point P1 is a control point which controls the shape of the curve between P0 and P2, and w is a weighting factor. An example is shown in Fig. 3. Solving Eq. 1 for unknown P1 and w is not simple. For the undeformed baffle shape, the P1 and w can be calculated, using the tangents of the curve through P0 and P2. In this case, P1 usually lies close to the curve that connects P0 and P2. The displacements of P0 and P2 can be calculated in the FE model in the same way, as described in section 3. It was assumed that the displacement of P1 is the same as that of a nearby point P11 that lies on the curve between P0 and P2 and which can therefore be incorporated in the FE mesh. The following method was applied:
The rings were divided into 180 nodes, separated by 2° from each other, and every second node was taken as control point P1. As a results, the number of nodes doubled, leading to longer computing time. It should be noted that this aspect will set a limit to the total number of nodes in FE and optical models. 5.THERMO-ELASTIC ANALYSISThe investigation of the thermo-elastic behaviour of the baffle was based on a NASTRAN FE model. The FE model only covers the major structural aspects. The rotationally symmetrical baffle body was meshed with thin shell elements (CQUAD4 and CTRIA3) while the three bipods were modelled with beam elements (CBEAM). The spatial resolution of the FE mesh was selected such that the model could be used to derive the optical performance of the baffle. Thermal simulations delivered the selected temperature distributions across the nodes of the thermal baffle model. The thermal model, however, contains much less nodes than the mechanical model. Furthermore, the nodes of the two models do no coincide. Thus, the temperatures at the nodes of the mechanical baffle model were calculated by interpolation based on the temperatures given at the thermal nodes. This included a two-dimensional interpolation based on the two major coordinates, i.e. the axial and the circumferential axes, with the shell structure of the baffle body. With the beam structures of the bipods the temperature development along the beam axis was interpolated. For the thermo-elastic calculations of the baffle in NASTRAN each bipod leg was clamped. The thermo-elastic analysis showed a non-axisymmetric deformation of the baffle under the influence of the sun radiation. The resulting stress distribution proved the isostatic suspension of the baffle body by the bipods. 6.RESULTSThe baffle geometry was tested for several different thermal load cases. Here, we present the following two representative cases.
The angle of incidence is important for assessing the accuracy of the baffle geometry, as more rays have to be reflected by the first elliptical segment with increasing angle of incidence. The performance figure of merit is the fraction of rays that reach the rear of the baffle as specular stray-light; expressed in promille. The ray-tracing was performed with the following parameters:
The simplified baffle geometry in the optical model leads to an inaccuracy in the ray-tracing. The following measures were taken to analyse the sensitivity and average over the stray-light performance resulting from the simplified baffle geometry.
For the ideal baffle geometry, all incident rays at angles >38° are reflected back into space, such that there is no specular stray-light. For the approximated geometries, there was stray-light for the undeformed shape, which represented an initial uncertainty. In some cases, the amount of stray-light of the deformed baffle was less than that of the undeformed baffle. We attribute this to the initial uncertainty in the geometry as well as to the possibility of an improved performance for a deformed baffle; i.e. the deformed baffle shape might be a better approximation to the ideal geometry than the undeformed shape. A) Intermediate angle of incidence: 50°, 55°, 60° Fig. 4 shows the temperature distribution on the deformed baffle. The highest temperature (red) is 128°C. Straight Segment Model Table 1 shows the stray-light performance for the undeformed and deformed baffle for six different numbers of rays. Table 1Baffle performance for 50°, 55°, 60° angle of incidence- straight segments
The average amount of specular stray-light is less than 1 Promille for the undeformed baffle for all angles of incidence. The deformed baffle shows similar performance, with lower average. The performance of the deformed baffle should be compared relative to that of the undeformed baffle, as the model introduces an inaccuracy in the geometry. Bezier splines model Table 2 shows the stray-light performance for the undeformed and deformed baffle for six different numbers of rays. Table 2Baffle performance for 50°, 55°, 60° angle of incidence- Bezier splines
The average amount of stray-light is up to 2.1 Promille for the undeformed baffle. The stray-light performance of the deformed baffle relative to the undeformed baffle is less than 1 Promille. The overall performance is worse than in the straight segment model. B) High angle of incidence: 70°, 75°, 80°, 85° Fig. 5 shows the temperature distribution on the deformed baffle. The highest temperature (red) is 126°C. Straight Segment Model Table 3 shows the stray-light performance for the undeformed and deformed baffle. Table 3Baffle performance for 70°, 75°, 80°, 85° angle of incidence- straight segments
The average amount of stray-light for the undeformed baffle is 1.9 Promille for 70°, while it is 23.1 Promille for 80°. This trend shows that the amount of stray-light become greater for higher angles of incidence. The stray-light at 85° is less than that at 80°; we contribute this behaviour to the inaccuracy of the model. The stray-light amount for the deformed baffle relative to the undeformed baffle is within 1.4 Promille. Bezier splines model Table 4 shows the stray-light performance for the undeformed and deformed baffle. Table 4Table 4 Baffle performance for 70°, 75°, 80°, 85° angle of incidence- Bezier splines
For 70°, the performance is slightly better than in the straight segment model, while for 75° it is worse. For the higher angles, the average amount of stray-light is up to 6 Promille for the undeformed baffle and up to 10 Promille for the deformed shape, which is much lower than in the straight segment model. 7.CONCLUSIONA) Intermediate angles of incidence In the straight segment model, the stray-light in the undeformed baffle represents an initial uncertainty of up to ~1 Promille. The stray-light for the deformed baffle relative to the undeformed baffle is within 1 Promille. Therefore, the performance of the deformed baffle is within the uncertainty of the model. In the Bezier splines model, the average stray-light amount is up to 2.1 Promille for the undeformed baffle. The stray-light of the deformed baffle relative to the undeformed baffle is less than 1 Promille. The overall performance is worse than in the straight segment model. B) High angles of incidence In the straight segment model, the stray-light amount in the undeformed baffle is up to ~23 Promille. This reflects the problem with the modelling accuracy at high angles of incidence, as more rays are reflected by the first elliptical segment. The stray-light for the deformed baffle relative to the undeformed baffle is within 1.4 Promille, which is slightly greater than the performance at intermediate angles of incidence. In the Bezier splines model, the performance is better than in the straight segment model for most angles of incidence. The improvement is very good for 80° and 85°, which suggests a better representation of the geometry by Bezier splines than by straight segments for high angles of incidence. However, at 75°, the performance is worse than in the straight segment model, such that the result is not general. General conclusionsThe investigation showed that while the Bezier splines method can work better than the linear one for selected cases, it is not easy to control the parameters, such that the results are always more accurate than the simplified geometry with straight segments. The comparison of the straight segment model with the Bezier splines showed that the average performance of the former is better for medium angles of incidence, while the Bezier splines seem to give a more accurate representation for higher angles of incidence. In order to improve the stray-light performance in the modelling, a more complex non-linear fitting of the baffle shape would be necessary. A promising method could be NURBS (non-uniform rational Bezier splines), as they have two control parameters to map the surface in three-dimensional space. NURBS are not implemented in all software applications, such that additional tools and interfaces might be necessary for a successful transfer from the FE model data into an optical model. In the method presented here, the Bezier splines have uncertainties in the control of the parameters for the deformed case, such that we prefer the results of the approximation with straight segments, even if it has a “birth” error. The straight segment approximation gives remarkably good performance results, whilst keeping the computing efforts reasonable. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTThe work presented herein was performed in the frame of BELA Phase B2 and funded by the Swiss Space Office. We would like to thank ESA and the BELA Team from the University of Bern for supporting this activity. 9.9.REFERENCESO.N. Stavroudis, L.D. Foo,
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