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Telescopes Chapter 3

Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

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Page 1: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Telescopes

Chapter 3

Page 2: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Objectives

• To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one.

• To know the primary parts and functions of each part of a telescope.

• To know the importance of the diameter of the objective and to know how the magnification of a telescope is related to the focal lengths of the objective and eyepiece.

• To know the advantages and disadvantages of earth and space-based telescopes.

Page 3: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)

Page 4: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

History

• invented by Dutch lens maker in 1608• Galileo: small 30X scope • Observed the moon and “began” the modern age of

Astronomy where measurement was more important than philosophy

Page 5: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

• moons orbiting Jupiter• phases of Venus• craters on the moon• sunspots

Galileo noticed

This was strong evidence that Copernicus was right although Galileo wasn’t willing to die for it.

Page 6: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

How a telescope works

• gathers light through the objective (mirror or lens)– bigger is better because it gathers more light– ability to see faint objects increases proportionally with

the square of the radius of the objective

• focuses light• viewed through an eyepiece (changing the

eyepiece changes the magnification)• magnification is the ratio of the focal length of the

objective to the focal length of the eyepiece

Page 7: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

General types of telescopes

• Refracting (objective is a lens)• Reflecting (objective is a mirror)

– Newtonian (Dobsonian)– Cassegrain

• Catadioptrics– uses mirrors and lenses– Schmidt-Cassegrain– Maksutov-Cassegrain

Page 8: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Refractors (glass lens)

Page 9: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Advantages and Disadvantages

• Easy to use and reliable• Excellent for lunar,

planetary and binary star observing especially in larger apertures.

• High contrast images with no secondary mirror or diagonal obstruction.

• Sealed optical tube reduces image degrading air currents and protects optics.

• More expensive per inch of aperture

• Heavier, longer and bulkier than equivalent aperture Newtonians and catadioptrics.

• Small apertures• Less suited for viewing small

and faint deep sky objects.• Color aberration due to

colors of light bending different amounts.

Page 10: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Reflectors (mirror)

Page 11: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Advantages and disadvantages

• Lowest cost per inch of aperture

• Reasonably compact and portable up to focal lengths of 1000mm.

• Excellent for faint deep sky objects such as remote galaxies, nebulae and star clusters.

• Reasonably good for lunar and planetary work.

• Low in optical aberrations.

• Open optical tube design allows image-degrading air currents and air contaminants

• More fragil• Large apertures (over 8")

are bulky, heavy and tend to be expensive.

• Slight light loss due to secondary obstruction when compared with refractors.

Page 12: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Cassegrain reflector

Page 13: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Catadioptric telescopes

• Best all-around, all-purpose telescope design. Combines the optical advantages of both lenses and mirrors while canceling their disadvantages.

• Sharp images over a wide field.• Excellent for deep sky observing or astrophotography with fast

films or CCD’s.• Very good for lunar, planetary and binary star observing or

photography.• Closed tube design reduces image degrading air currents.• Most are extremely compact and portable.• Large apertures at reasonable prices and less expensive than

equivalent aperture refractors.

Page 14: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Schmidtt-Cassegrain

Page 15: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Arrays

• Combining information from multiple sources.

• Used in radio-telescopes

Page 16: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Problems with earth-based telescopes

• Earth’s atmosphere reflects certain wavelengths– x-rays, gamma rays and most UV light is not

transmitted by our atmosphere

• Earth’s atmosphere blurs images– the bending of light by the atmosphere depends on the

temperature of the “air”

– “twinkling” (shimmering) effect

• “Light pollution”• Solution? Put the telescope in space.

Page 17: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Disadvantages of space-based telescopes

• Expensive to launch and maintain

• Difficult to repair

• Low lifetime

Page 18: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Examples of space-based telescopes

• Hubble Space Telescope– 3 times better resolution– can see fainter objects

• Chandra X-ray Observatory

• Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory

Page 19: Telescopes Chapter 3. Objectives To know the general types of telescopes and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. To know the primary parts and

Links

• http://www.space.com/6716-major-space-telescopes.html

• http://amazing-space.stsci.edu/resources/explorations/groundup/

• http://hubblesite.org/

• http://www.spacetelescope.org/

• http://kepler.nasa.gov/

• http://www.jwst.nasa.gov/

• http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/

• http://chandra.harvard.edu/

• http://chandra.harvard.edu

• http://www.herschel.caltech.edu/

• https://herschel.jpl.nasa.gov/

• http://sci.esa.int/planck/

• http://www.vla.nrao.edu/