The Influence of Motion and Stress on Optical Fibers
Jeremy D. Murphy, Gary J. Hill, Phillip J. MacQueen, Trey Taylor, Ian, Soukup, Walter Moreira, Mark E. Cornell, John Good, Seth Anderson, Lindsay, Fuller, Hanshin Lee, Andreas Kelz, Marc Rafal, Tom Rafferty, Sarah Tuttle and, Brian Vattiat

TL;DR
This study investigates how long-term simulated wear affects optical fibers used in astronomical instruments, revealing increased focal ratio degradation over time due to microfractures, with implications for fiber durability and performance.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive analysis of long-term wear effects on VIRUS optical fibers, highlighting the increase in FRD due to microfractures and the fiber's resilience to bending at certain radii.
Findings
Transmission remains stable over 10+ years of simulated wear.
FRD increases over time, likely from microfractures.
Fibers are immune to bending-induced FRD above 10cm radius.
Abstract
We report on extensive testing carried out on the optical fibers for the VIRUS instrument. The primary result of this work explores how 10+ years of simulated wear on a VIRUS fiber bundle affects both transmission and focal ratio degradation (FRD) of the optical fibers. During the accelerated lifetime tests we continuously monitored the fibers for signs of FRD. We find that transient FRD events were common during the portions of the tests when motion was at telescope slew rates, but dropped to negligible levels during rates of motion typical for science observation. Tests of fiber transmission and FRD conducted both before and after the lifetime tests reveal that while transmission values do not change over the 10+ years of simulated wear, a clear increase in FRD is seen in all 18 fibers tested. This increase in FRD is likely due to microfractures that develop over time from repeated…
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