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- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!tamsun.tamu.edu!zeus.tamu.edu!wdb3926
- From: wdb3926@zeus.tamu.edu (BRUTON, WILLIAM DANIEL)
- Subject: Re: Cleaning a mirror
- Message-ID: <29AUG199201502261@zeus.tamu.edu>
- News-Software: VAX/VMS VNEWS 1.41
- Sender: news@tamsun.tamu.edu (Read News)
- Organization: Texas A&M University, Academic Computing Services
- References: <BtnJ6A.6yJ@zorch.SF-Bay.ORG> <27AUG199221480457@rigel.tamu.edu> <1992Aug28.194259.16301@ast.saic.com>
- Date: Sat, 29 Aug 1992 06:50:00 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- >>
- >>Has anyone ever re-silvered a mirror before? How big of a pain was it?
- >>
- >
- >Do you mean re-silver or re-aluminize?
- >
-
- I beg your pardon. I meant "re-silver" in the broader since.....
- "to plate with a lustrous substance". I should have been more clear.
-
- >
- >I'm certain that the Astroscan has an aluminized mirror, not a silver
- >one. In the old days, mirrors were coated with silver and had to be
- >re-coated every few months or so (I don't remember the precise
- >interval).
- >
- >Today's modern mirrors are aluminized and the coating can last years.
- >Re-aluminizing requires a vacuum container with heating elements in it.
- >Bits of aluminum are hung on the the heaters. Then you seal the whole
- >apparatus, pull a vacuum inside it, and turn on the heaters for a
- >measured amount of time. This evapoates the aluminum and the longer it
- >is evaporated, the more goes on the mirror.
- >
-
- Thanks for the info. We found a large vacuum chamber (~1meter diameter)
- with resistive boats for aluminum (metal) deposition in a local solid state
- physics lab that is currently being use for making High Tc superconductors.
- I think they will let use us it. So one might check into these kinds of labs
- to save some money.
-
- Thanks again.
- Dan
- TAMU
-
-