Title: Telescopes
1Telescopes
2Galileo 1609
3The Moon as a World
4Jupiter has Moons
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6Refracting telescopes
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8Long focus refractors were awkward but suffered
less from chromatic aberration
9Isaac Newtons reflecting telescope
Mirrors do not have chromatic aberration
10Reflecting telescope
Objective mirrors instead of lenses
11Three Powers
- Magnifying
- Resolving
- Light Gathering
12Magnifying Power
- Ability to make objects appear larger in angular
size - One can change the magnifying power of a
telescope by changing the eyepiece used with it - Mag Power focal length of objective divided by
the focal length of the eyepiece
13Resolving Power
- Ability to see fine detail
- Depends on the diameter of the objective lens or
mirror
14Light Gathering Power
- The ability to make faint objects look brighter
- Depends on the area of the objective lens or
mirror - Thus a telescope with an objective lens 2 inches
in diameter has 4 times the light gathering power
of a telescope with a lens 1 inch in diameter
15Herschel Lord Rosse
1619th century epoch of the large refractors
17Refracting telescopes
Lick
Vienna
18Yerkes Observatory
Largest refracting telescope with a one meter
objective
1920th century Large Reflectors Come of Age
Mount Wilson Observatory 1.5m (1908) and 2.5m
(1918)
20Palomar 5-m(entered operation in 1948)
214 meter Reflecting telescope
22Objective Mirror
23Dome of 4 meter Kitt Peak
24Keck Telescopes
25SOAR Telescope
4.1 meter
26SOAR Telescope -- Cerro Pachon
27SOAR Observing Room
28SOAR Image of the planetary nebula NGC 2440
29MSU Campus Observatory
30Boller Chivens reflecting telescope with a
24-inch objective mirror
31More on resolution
- Eagle-eyed Dawes
- The Dawes Limit
- R 4.56/D
- Where
- R resolution in seconds of arc
- D diameter of objective in inches
- More appropriate for visible light and small
telescopes
32A more general expression for the theoretical
resolving power
- Imagine that star images look like Airy disks
33Minimum Angle that can be resolved
- R 1.22 x 206,265 l / d
- R resolution in seconds of arc
- l wavelength of light
- d diameter of the objective lens or mirror
- Note that the wavelength of light and the
diameter of the objective should be in the same
units
34Examples
- For Visible light around 500nm
- Our 24-inch telescope
- R 0.20 seconds
- This may be compared with the Dawes limit of 0.19
seconds - But with large ground-based telescopes it is
difficult to achieve this
35Astronomical seeing
- Blurring effect of looking through air
- Causes stars to twinkle and planetary detail to
blur - At the SOAR site good seeing means stellar
images better than about 0.7 seconds of arc - In Michigan, good seeing means better than about
3 seconds of arc - Not to be confused with good transparency
36Bad seeing on this side
Good seeing on this side
37Electromagnetic Spectrum
38Radio TelescopesArecibo
39Very Large Array
40Radio telescope resolution
- 1m d 100m
- R 2500 seconds 42 minutes!
- Even though radio telescopes are much bigger,
their resolving power is much worse than for
optical telescopes - Interferometric arrays get around this
41Very Large Array
42Interferometry
- Size of array 10 km for a VLA
- This becomes the effective d
- Now R becomes 25 secsec for a
- 1-m wavelength
- For VLBI (very long baseline interfeormetry) the
d 10,000km and R 0.025 seconds
43Observing from space
- No clouds
- Perfect seeing
- Can see wavelengths of light blocked by the
earths atmosphere
44Hubble Space Telescope
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48Rooftop telescopes