At the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, I designed a rotary shearing interferometer to speed up space telescope alignment and collimation in the ICESat-2 Optical Design System lab, the mission's optics sandbox for running experiments on the ground to validate designs and components before launch.
The ICESat-2 mission aims to quantify climate change by measuring ice sheet thickness, sea level changes, and forest canopy height with a laser altimeter system in space. The satellite beams a laser at Earth and captures reflected photons using a high-power telescope.
The Tilt'N'Whirl, a lightweight and collapsable rotary shearing interferometer for quick laser collimation inspection.
Custom shearing interferometer module. A machined aluminum cradle houses the glass wedge which displays interference patterns from incident light on a textured glass plate.
The two shearing interferometers sit on a linear track that rotates 360 degrees at its center.
The Tilt'N'Whirl in its collapsed configuration used for storage.
The interferometers sit on a quick-lock/release slide. The ends of the linear track are capped in red for visibility and safety.