Harley Thronson
Goddard Space Flight Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Harley Thronson.
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2016
Matthew R. Bolcar; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Julie A. Crooke; Lee D. Feinberg; Manuel A. Quijada; Bernard J. Rauscher; David C. Redding; Norman Rioux; Stuart B. Shaklan; H. Philip Stahl; Carl Michael Stahle; Harley Thronson
Abstract. The Advanced Technology Large Aperture Space Telescope (ATLAST) team identified five key technology areas to enable candidate architectures for a future large-aperture ultraviolet/optical/infrared (LUVOIR) space observatory envisioned by the NASA Astrophysics 30-year roadmap, “Enduring Quests, Daring Visions.” The science goals of ATLAST address a broad range of astrophysical questions from early galaxy and star formation to the processes that contributed to the formation of life on Earth, combining general astrophysics with direct-imaging and spectroscopy of habitable exoplanets. The key technology areas are internal coronagraphs, starshades (or external occulters), ultra-stable large-aperture telescope systems, detectors, and mirror coatings. For each technology area, we define best estimates of required capabilities, current state-of-the-art performance, and current technology readiness level (TRL), thus identifying the current technology gap. We also report on current, planned, or recommended efforts to develop each technology to TRL 5.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2015
Matthew R. Bolcar; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Mark Clampin; Julie A. Crooke; Lee D. Feinberg; Marc Postman; Manuel A. Quijada; Bernard J. Rauscher; David C. Redding; Norman Rioux; Stuart B. Shaklan; H. Philip Stahl; Carl Michael Stahle; Harley Thronson
The Advanced Technology Large Aperture Space Telescope (ATLAST) team has identified five key technologies to enable candidate architectures for the future large-aperture ultraviolet/optical/infrared (LUVOIR) space observatory envisioned by the NASA Astrophysics 30-year roadmap, Enduring Quests, Daring Visions. The science goals of ATLAST address a broad range of astrophysical questions from early galaxy and star formation to the processes that contributed to the formation of life on Earth, combining general astrophysics with direct-imaging and spectroscopy of habitable exoplanets. The key technologies are: internal coronagraphs, starshades (or external occulters), ultra-stable large-aperture telescopes, detectors, and mirror coatings. Selected technology performance goals include: 1x10-10 raw contrast at an inner working angle of 35 milli-arcseconds, wavefront error stability on the order of 10 pm RMS per wavefront control step, autonomous on-board sensing and control, and zero-read-noise single-photon detectors spanning the exoplanet science bandpass between 400 nm and 1.8 μm. Development of these technologies will provide significant advances over current and planned observatories in terms of sensitivity, angular resolution, stability, and high-contrast imaging. The science goals of ATLAST are presented and flowed down to top-level telescope and instrument performance requirements in the context of a reference architecture: a 10-meter-class, segmented aperture telescope operating at room temperature (~290 K) at the sun-Earth Lagrange-2 point. For each technology area, we define best estimates of required capabilities, current state-of-the-art performance, and current Technology Readiness Level (TRL) – thus identifying the current technology gap. We report on current, planned, or recommended efforts to develop each technology to TRL 5.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
William R. Oegerle; Lee D. Feinberg; Lloyd Purves; Tupper Hyde; Harley Thronson; Jacqueline A. Townsend; Marc Postman; Matthew R. Bolcar; Jason Budinoff; Bruce H. Dean; Mark Clampin; Dennis C. Ebbets; Qian Gong; Theodore R. Gull; Joseph M. Howard; Andrew L. Jones; Richard G. Lyon; Bert A. Pasquale; Charles Perrygo; Jeffrey S. Smith; Patrick L. Thompson; Bruce E. Woodgate
We present results of a study of a deployable version of the Advanced Technology Large-Aperture Space Telescope (ATLAST), designed to operate in a Sun-Earth L2 orbit. The primary mirror of the segmented 9.2-meter aperture has 36 hexagonal 1.315 m (flat-to-flat) glass mirrors. The architecture and folding of the telescope is similar to JWST, allowing it to fit into the 6.5 m fairing of a modest upgrade to the Delta-IV Heavy version of the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV). We discuss the overall observatory design, optical design, instruments, stray light, wavefront sensing and control, pointing and thermal control, and in-space servicing options.
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2017
Paul A. Scowen; Todd M. Tripp; Matt Beasley; D. R. Ardila; B.-G. Andersson; Jesús Maíz Apellániz; M. A. Barstow; Luciana Bianchi; Daniela Calzetti; Mark Clampin; C. J. Evans; M. Garcia; Ana Inés Gómez de Castro; Walter M. Harris; Patrick Hartigan; J. Christopher Howk; J. B. Hutchings; Juan I. Larruquert; Charles F. Lillie; Gary Matthews; Stephan R. McCandliss; Ron Polidan; Mario R. Perez; Marc Rafelski; Ian U. Roederer; H. Sana; Wilton T. Sanders; David Schiminovich; Harley Thronson; Jason Tumlinson
Proceedings from Workshop held in June 2015 at NASA GSFC on the Future of UV Astronomy from Space
Proceedings of SPIE | 2015
Norman Rioux; Harley Thronson; Lee D. Feinberg; H. Phillip Stahl; Dave Redding; Andrew Jones; James Sturm; Christine Collins; Alice Liu
Our joint NASA GSFC/JPL/MSFC/STScI study team has used community-provided science goals to derive mission needs, requirements, and candidate mission architectures for a future large-aperture, non-cryogenic UVOIR space observatory. We describe the feasibility assessment of system thermal and dynamic stability for supporting coronagraphy. The observatory is in a Sun-Earth L2 orbit providing a stable thermal environment and excellent field of regard. Reference designs include a 36-segment 9.2 m aperture telescope that stows within a five meter diameter launch vehicle fairing. Performance needs developed under the study are traceable to a variety of reference designs including options for a monolithic primary mirror.
AIAA SPACE 2013 Conference and Exposition | 2013
Lora Bailey; David Folta; Brent W. Barbee; Frank Vaughn; Frank Kirchman; Jacob A. Englander; Bruce Campbell; Harley Thronson; Tzu Yu Lin
We present a lean fast-transfer architecture concept for a first human mission to Mars that utilizes current technologies and two pivotal parameters: an end-to-end Mars mission duration of approximately one year, and a deep space habitat of approximately 50 metric tons. These parameters were formulated by a 2012 deep space habitat study conducted at the NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC) that focused on a subset of recognized high- engineering-risk factors that may otherwise limit space travel to destinations such as Mars or near-Earth asteroid (NEA)s. With these constraints, we model and promote Mars mission opportunities in the 2030s enabled by a combination of on-orbit staging, mission element pre-positioning, and unique round-trip trajectories identified by state-of-the-art astrodynamics algorithms.
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2016
Norman Rioux; Harley Thronson; Lee D. Feinberg; H. Philip Stahl; David C. Redding; Andrew L. Jones; James Sturm; Christine Collins; Alice Kuochia C. Liu; Matthew R. Bolcar
Abstract. Our joint NASA GSFC/JPL/MSFC and STScI study team has used community-developed science goals to derive mission needs, design parameters, notional instruments, and candidate mission architectures for a future large-aperture, noncryogenic UVOIR space observatory. We describe the feasibility assessment of system dynamic stability that supports coronagraphy. The observatory is in a Sun–Earth L2 orbit, which provides a stable thermal environment and excellent field of regard. Reference designs include a 36-segment 9.2-m aperture telescope that stows within a 5-m diameter launch vehicle fairing. This paper presents results from the latest cycle of integrated modeling through January 2016. The latest findings support the feasibility of secondary mirror support struts with a thickness on the order of an inch. Thin struts were found not to have a significant negative effect on wavefront error stability. Struts with a width as small as 1 in. may benefit some coronagraph designs by allowing more optical throughput.
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2016
Harley Thronson; Matthew R. Bolcar; Mark Clampin; Julie A. Crooke; Lee D. Feinberg; William R. Oegerle; Norman Rioux; H. Philip Stahl; Karl R. Stapelfeldt
Abstract. Our recently completed study for the Advanced Technology Large-Aperture Space Telescope (ATLAST) was the culmination of three years of initially internally funded work that built upon earlier engineering designs, science objectives, and technology priorities. Beginning in the mid-1980s, multiple teams of astronomers, technologists, and engineers developed concepts for a large-aperture UV/optical/IR space observatory intended to follow the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Here, we summarize since the first significant conferences on major post-HST ultraviolet, optical, and infrared (UVOIR) observatories the history of designs, scientific goals, key technology recommendations, and community workshops. Although the sophistication of science goals and the engineering designs both advanced over the past three decades, we note the remarkable constancy of major characteristics of large post-HST UVOIR concepts. As it has been a priority goal for NASA and science communities for a half-century, and has driven much of the technology priorities for major space observatories, we include the long history of concepts for searching for Earth-like worlds. We conclude with a capsule summary of our ATLAST reference designs developed by four partnering institutions over the past three years, which was initiated in 2013 to prepare for the 2020 National Academies’ Decadal Survey.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Marc Postman; W. B. Sparks; Fengchuan Liu; Kim Ess; Joseph J. Green; Kenneth G. Carpenter; Harley Thronson; Renaud Goullioud
The infrastructure available on the ISS provides a unique opportunity to develop the technologies necessary to assemble large space telescopes. Assembling telescopes in space is a game-changing approach to space astronomy. Using the ISS as a testbed enables a concentration of resources on reducing the technical risks associated with integrating the technologies, such as laser metrology and wavefront sensing and control (WFS&C), with the robotic assembly of major components including very light-weight primary and secondary mirrors and the alignment of the optical elements to a diffraction-limited optical system in space. The capability to assemble the optical system and remove and replace components via the existing ISS robotic systems such as the Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator (SPDM), or by the ISS Flight Crew, allows for future experimentation as well as repair if necessary. In 2015, first light will be obtained by the Optical Testbed and Integration on ISS eXperiment (OpTIIX), a small 1.5-meter optical telescope assembled on the ISS. The primary objectives of OpTIIX include demonstrating telescope assembly technologies and end-to-end optical system technologies that will advance future large optical telescopes.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
David C. Redding; Lee D. Feinberg; Marc Postman; H. Philip Stahl; Carl Michael Stahle; Harley Thronson
This paper considers requirements for a future large space telescope to follow the James Webb Space Telescope, starting in the next decade. Its ambitious science program includes direct imaging and spectroscopy of Earth-like planets orbiting other stars, resolving individual stars in nearby galaxies, and probing the most distant regions of the observable universe to a visible-light resolution of 100 parsec, while providing high spectral resolution for wavelengths from 100 to 2,500 nm. The top-level optical requirements flowdown is briefly described, with reference to existing and future capabilities. The intent is to identify technology development needed in the last half of this decade, to support the priorities of the 2020 Decadal Survey.