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Unit 3. Telescopes. Optical Telescopes. Two basic types Refractors Reflectors. Refractors. Uses lenses to gather and concentrate light. Refractors. Advantages: Refractor telescopes are rugged Lenses inside the tube is sealed so it rarely needs cleaning images are steadier and sharper
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Unit 3 Telescopes
Optical Telescopes • Two basic types • Refractors • Reflectors
Refractors • Uses lenses to gather and concentrate light
Refractors • Advantages: • Refractor telescopes are rugged • Lenses inside the tube is sealed so it rarely needs cleaning • images are steadier and sharper • Disadvantages: • chromatic aberration • Lens supported only at the ends, lens will sag • Expensive, heavy
Reflectors • Uses a curved mirror to focus incoming light
Reflectors • Advantages: • Do not suffer from chromatic aberration • Can be made very BIG! • Less expensive, lighter • Disadvantages: • Optics need more frequent alignment • Open to the outside, need frequent cleaning • Secondary mirror can produce diffraction effects
Types of Reflectors • Gregorian • Newtonian • Cassegrain
Telescope magnification Magnification = focal length of telescope / focal length eyepiece e.g. focal length of telescope = 1000 mm focal length of eyepiece = 30 mm magnification = 1000 mm/ 30 mm = 33
Brightness • The observed brightness of an object is directly proportional to the area of the telescope mirror, e.g. a 5 meter telescope will have a light gathering capacity 25 times (52) greater than a 1 meter telescope
History of Large Telescopes • William Herschel (late 1700s)
Mt. Wilson (1917) • 100 inch
Hale (1948) • 200 inch
Space Telescopes • outside the distortion of Earth's atmosphere • extremely sharp images • almost no background light
Space Telescopes • Hubble • Spitzer • Chandra
Kepler Space Telescope • Designed to discover Earth-like planets
Herschel Space Observatory Launched in 2009 by the European Space Agency Sensitive to Infrared radiation
Image Acquisition & Processing • Charge-coupled devices (CCDs) computer (very efficient)
How to pick a telescope • Start by using your bare eyes • Next, move up to binoculars • When you’re ready for a telescope, read/ research
Choosing the right telescope • Performance • Purpose • Portability • Light Pollution • Price
All other things being equal, the greater the mirror/ lens diameter the greater the light gathering ability • Primary Mirror Size Square Inches of Aperture 4" 12 6 28 8 50 10 78 12 113 • http://www.astronomics.com/main/category.asp/catalog_name/Astronomics/category_name/How%20to%20pick%20a%20telescope/Page/1