Title: History of Astronomical Instruments
1History of Astronomical Instruments
- The early history
- From the unaided eye to telescopes
2The Human Eye
- Anatomy and
- Detection Characteristics
3Anatomy of the Human Eye
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14Visual Observations
- Navigation
- Calendars
- Unusual Objects (comets etc.)
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16Hawaiian Navigation From Tahiti to Hawaii Using
the North direction, Knowledge of the
lattitude, And the predominant direction of the
Trade Winds
17Tycho Quadrant
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19Pre-Telescopic Observations
- Navigation
- Calendar
- Astrology
- Planetary Motion
- Copernican System
- Keplers Laws
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21Why build telescopes?
- Larger aperture means more light gathering power
- sensitivity goes like D2, where D is diameter of
main light collecting element (e.g., primary
mirror) - Larger aperture means better angular resolution
- resolution goes like lambda/D, where lambda is
wavelength and D is diameter of mirror
22Collection Telescopes
- Refractor telescopes
- exclusively use lenses to collect light
- have big disadvantages aberrations sheer
weight of lenses - Reflector telescopes
- use mirrors to collect light
- relatively free of aberrations
- mirror fabrication techniques steadily improving
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25William Herschel
Caroline Herschel
26Herschel 40 ft Telescope
27Optical Reflecting Telescopes
- Basic optical designs
- Prime focus light is brought to focus by primary
mirror, without further deflection - Newtonian use flat, diagonal secondary mirror to
deflect light out side of tube - Cassegrain use convex secondary mirror to
reflect light back through hole in primary - Nasmyth focus use tertiary mirror to redirect
light to external instruments
28Mirror Grinding Tool
29Mirror Polishing Machine
30Fine Ground Mirror
31Mirror Polishing
32Figuring the Asphere
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38Crossley 36 Reflector
39Yerkes 40-inch Refractor
40Drawing of the Moon (1865)
41First Photograph of the Moon (1865)
42The Limitations of Ground-based Observations
- Diffraction
- Seeing
- Sky Backgrounds
43Diffraction
44Wavefront Description of Optical System
45Wavefronts of Two Well Separated Stars
46When are Two Wavefront Distinguishable ?
47Atmospheric Turbulence
48Characteristics of Good Sites
- Geographic latitude 15 - 35
- Near the coast or isolated mountain
- Away from large cities
- High mountain
- Reasonable logistics
49Modern Observatories
The ESO-VLT Observatory at Paranal, Chile
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51Puu Poliahu
UH 0.6-m
UH 2.2-m
UH 0.6-m
The first telescopes on Mauna Kea (1964-1970)
52Local SeeingFlow Pattern Around a Building
- Incoming neutral flow should enter the building
to contribute to flushing, the height of the
turbulent ground layer determines the minimum
height of the apertures. - Thermal exchanges with the ground by
re-circulation inside the cavity zone is the main
source of thermal turbulence in the wake.
53Mirror Seeing
- When a mirror is warmer that the air in an
undisturbed enclosure, a convective equilibrium
(full cascade) is reached after 10-15mn. The
limit on the convective cell size is set by the
mirror diameter
54LOCAL TURBULENCEMirror Seeing
The contribution to seeing due to turbulence over
the mirror is given by
- The warm mirror seeing varies slowly with the
thickness of the convective layer reduce height
by 3 orders of magnitude to divide mirror seeing
by 4, from 0.5 to 0.12 arcsec/K
55Mirror Seeing
The thickness of the boundary layer over a flat
plate increases with the distance to the edge in
the and with the flow velocity.
- When a mirror is warmer that the air in a flushed
enclosure, the convective cells cannot reach
equilibrium. The flushing velocity must be large
enough so as to decrease significantly (down to
10-30cm) the thickness turbulence over the whole
diameter of the mirror.
56Thermal Emission AnalysisVLT Unit Telescope
- UT3 Enclosure
- 19 Feb. 1999
- 0h34 Local Time
- Wind summit ENE, 4m/s
- Air Temp summit 13.8C
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58Gemini South Dome
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73Night Sky Emission Lines at Optical Wavelengths
74Sky Background in J, H, and K Bands
75Sky Background in L and M Band
76V-band sky brightness variations
77H-band OH Emission Lines
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80Camera Construction Techniques 1.
The photo below shows a scientific CCD camera in
use at the Isaac Newton Group. It is
approximately 50cm long, weighs about 10Kg and
contains a single cryogenically cooled CCD. The
camera is general purpose detector with a
universal face-plate for attachment to
various telescope ports.
Pre-amplifier
Vacuum pump port
Pressure Vessel
Mounting clamp
Camera mounting Face-plate.
Liquid Nitrogen fill port
81Camera Construction Techniques 4.
A cutaway diagram of the same camera is shown
below.
Thermally Electrical feed-through Vacuum
Space Pressure vessel Pump
Port Insulating Pillars
Face-plate
.
.
Telescope beam
Boil-off
.
Optical window CCD CCD Mounting
Block Thermal coupling Nitrogen can
Activated charcoal Getter
Focal Plane of Telescope
82Camera Construction Techniques 5.
The camera with the face-plate removed is shown
below
Retaining clamp
Temperature servo circuit board
CCD
Aluminised Mylar sheet
Gold plated copper mounting block
Top of LN2 can
Platinum resistance thermometer
Pressure Vessel
Spider. The CCD mounting block is stood off
from the spider using insulating pillars.
Location points (x3) for insulating pillars that
reference the CCD to the camera face-plate
Signal wires to CCD
83Camera Construction Techniques 6.
A Radiation Shield is then screwed down onto
the spider , covering the cold components but not
obstructing the CCD view. This shield is highly
polished and cooled to an intermediate
temperature by a copper braid that connects it to
the LN2 can.
Radiation Shield
84Camera Construction Techniques 7.
Some CCDs cameras are embedded into optical
instruments as dedicated detectors. The CCD shown
below is mounted in a spider assembly and placed
at the focus of a Schmidt camera.
CCD Signal connector (x3)
Copper rod or cold finger used to cool the CCD.
It is connected to an LN2 can.
Spider Vane
CCD Clamp plate
Gold plated copper CCD mounting block.
FOS 1 Spectrograph
CCD Package