ams@philabs.UUCP (Ali Shaik) (12/09/85)
One way to figure out if a thin circular sheet would deform to a paraboloid when pressurized is to set up the differential equations of deformation and solve them. Intuitive analogies to soap bubbles, etc may not always work. I looked up "Theory of plates and shells" by Timoshenko and Woinowsky-Kreiger, and sure enough, they had done all the dirty work for me! (see eq. 67 on page 57). The deflection contains the square of the radius multiplied by a large constant plus radius to the fourth power. The surface is a paraboloid to within 6% upto half the radius of the sheet. Thus darkening the area beyond 0.5r looks as if it would give close approximation to a paraboloid. I don't know how much this means in terms of image quality. It looks promising for manufacture of cheap telescopes. - Ali "Bangalore" Shaik ihnp4!philabs!ams
gwyn@brl-tgr.ARPA (Doug Gwyn <gwyn>) (12/10/85)
> It looks promising for manufacture of cheap telescopes.
Now we just need cheap space boosters.