Tests with a Carlina-type diluted telescope; Primary coherencing
H. Le Coroller, J. Dejonghe, X. Regal, R. Sottile, D. Mourard, D., Ricci, O. Lardiere, A. Le Vansuu, M. Boer, M. De Becker, J.M. Clausse, C., Guillaume, J.P. Meunier

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the feasibility of a Carlina-type diluted telescope by testing a metrology system that aligns primary mirrors with micron accuracy using a helium balloon, advancing the development of new interferometric telescopes.
Contribution
It presents a novel metrology method for aligning primary mirrors in a Carlina-type diluted telescope with micron precision, tested under balloon conditions.
Findings
Achieved mirror alignment accuracy of about 1 micron.
Maintained fringe stability over 15 minutes.
Demonstrated mechanical stability within a few microns.
Abstract
Studies are under way to propose a new generation of post-VLTI interferometers. The Carlina concept studied at the Haute- Provence Observatory is one of the proposed solutions. It consists in an optical interferometer configured like a diluted version of the Arecibo radio telescope: above the diluted primary mirror made of fixed cospherical segments, a helium balloon (or cables suspended between two mountains), carries a gondola containing the focal optics. Since 2003, we have been building a technical demonstrator of this diluted telescope. First fringes were obtained in May 2004 with two closely-spaced primary segments and a CCD on the focal gondola. We have been testing the whole optical train with three primary mirrors. The main aim of this article is to describe the metrology that we have conceived, and tested under the helium balloon to align the primary mirrors separate by 5-10 m…
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