The f/2.4 primary mirror is a 1.7-meter off-axis section of a 5.3-meter diameter, f/0.73 concave parabola. It was cast from Zerodur by Schott and polished at the of the University of Arizona. The figure error with respect to a parabola is 16 nmRMS. The secondary mirror, a concave ellipsoid, is mounted on a hexapod to compensate for thermal expansion and bending of the telescope structure keeping the mirror in its optimal position. A reflective, liquid-cooled circular field-stop in the primary focus before the secondary mirror limits the field of view to 120 arcseconds in order to reduce the solar heat load on subsequent optics. The GST is mounted on an equatorial mount made by DFM Engineering inside a ventilated dome resembling 5/8 of a sphere.
Adaptive Optics
The Goode Solar Telescope deploys adaptive optical systems to mitigate image blur caused by atmospheric turbulence. The system AO308 is routinely used for the vast majority of observations and serves all post-focus instruments expect of CYRA. AO308 is a classicaladaptive optics system. It uses a Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor that measures the average wavefront aberration over a field of view of 10 arcseconds and a single deformable mirror with 357 actuators for wavefront correction.
Instrumentation
Broad-Band Filter Imager (BFI)
The BFI is a filtergraph made of an interference filter and a digital CCD camera that samples the image of the Sun. The interference filter works as a band-pass filter that only transmits a selected color of the sunlight. Frequently used bands are 705.7 ± 0.5 nm oxide and 430.5 ± 0.25 nm. The BFI camera captures 2048 × 2048 pixel images at a speed of 14 frames per second, covering an area on the Sun of 50,000 km × 50,000 km in the TiO line, and 40,000 km × 40,000 km in the G-Band. Despite adaptive optics, each frame suffers from atmospheric aberrations hindering diffraction limited image detail. In order to obtain diffraction limited resolution, bursts of about 100 frames get digitally analyzed to be formed into a single sharpened image.
Visible Imaging Spectrometer (VIS)
The VIS is an imaging spectrograph that, like the BFI, captures images of the Sun in narrow wavelength ranges. Instead of interference filters, however, VIS uses a Fabry–Pérot etalon to create a band-pass as narrow as 0.007 nm, tunable from 550 to 700 nm. VIS is frequently used to scan through the Fraunhofer lines at 656.3 nm, 630.2 nm, and 588.9 nm. Per scan step multiple images frames are captured that also get processed for enhanced image detail.