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A telescope (from the Greek tele = 'far' and skopein
= 'to look or see'; teleskopos = 'far-seeing') is an astronomical
tool which gathers and focuses electromagnetic radiation.
Telescopes increase the apparent angular size of ingerso
objects, as well as their apparent brightness. Telescopes
used for non-astronomical purposes are often referred
to as theodolites, transits, spotting scopes, monoculars,
binoculars, camera
lens , microscopes or spyglasses.
The word "telescope" usually refers to optical
telescopes , but there are telescopes for most of
the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation.
Radio telescopes are focused radio antennas, usually shaped
like large dishes. The dish is sometimes constructed of
a conductive wire mesh whose openings are smaller than
a wavelength. Radio telescopes are often operated in pairs,
or larger groups to synthesize large "virtual"
apertures that are similar in size to the separation between
the telescopes: see aperture synthesis. The current record
is many times the width of the Earth, utilizing space-based
VLBI telescopes such as the Japanese HALCA VSOP satellite.
Aperture synthesis is now also being applied to optical
telescopes using optical interferometers (arrays of optical
telescopes) and Aperture Masking Interferometry at single
telescopes.
X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes have a problem because
these rays go through most metals and glasses. They use
ring-shaped "glancing" mirrors, made of heavy
metals, that reflect the rays just a few degrees. The
mirrors are usually a section of a rotated parabola.
History
The first telescopes may have been Assyrian crystal lenses.
Though the Visby lenses tentatively suggest that the technology
was known to the Arabs and then to the Vikings in the
10th century, credit for assembling the first telescope
is usually given to an unknown Dutch spectacle maker in
about 1608. Others name that person as Hans Lippershey
(c1570-c1619). Even if Lippershey did not make the first
one, he publicized it. Galileo Galilei made his own telescope
in 1609, calling it at first a perspicillum, and then
using the terms telescopium in Latin and telescopio in
Italian (from which the English word derives). Galileo
is generally credited with being the first to use a telescope
for astronomical purposes. Galileo's telescope consisted
of a convex object lens and a concave eye lens, which
is universally called a Galilean Telescope (used as a
viewfinder in many simple cameras). Later, Johannes Kepler
described the optics of lenses (see his books Astronomiae
Pars Optica and Dioptrice), including a new kind of astronomical
telescope with two convex lenses (a principle often called
Kepler telescope). Optical interferometer arrays and arrays
of radio telescopes were developed much more recently.
Telescope mountings
A simple telescope mount is an altitude-azimuth or altazimuth
mount. It is similar to that of a surveying transit. A
fork rotates in azimuth (in the horizontal plane), and
bearings on the tips of the fork allow the telescope to
vary in altitude (in a vertical plane). A dobsonian mount
is a type of altazimuth mount which has proven to be very
popular as it is simple and cheap to make.
The major problem with using an altazimuth for astronomy
is that both axes must be continuously adjusted to compensate
for the Earth's rotation. Even if this is done, by computer
control, the image rotates at a rate that varies depending
on the angle of the star from the celestial pole. The
last effect especially makes an altazimuth mount impractical
for long-exposure photography with small telescopes.
The preferred solution for small astronomical telescopes
is to tip the altazimuth mount so that the azimuth axis
is parallel with the axis of the Earth's rotation; this
is known as an equatorial mount.
Modern large telescopes use computer-controlled altazimuth
mounts, and for long exposures they rotate the instruments
or have variable-rate image rotators in an image of the
telescope pupil.
There are mountings even simpler than altazimuth, typically
for specialised instruments. A few are: meridian transit
(altitude only); fixed with movable plane mirror for solar
observing; ball-and-socket (ancient and useless for astronomy).
Research telescopes
Most large research telescopes can operate as either a
cassegrain telescope (longer focal length, and a narrower
field with higher magnification) or newtonian telescope
(brighter field). They have a pierced primary, a newtonian
focus, and a spider to mount a variety of replaceable
secondaries.
A new era of telescope making was inaugurated by the MMT,
with a mirror composed of six segments synthesizing a
mirror of 4.5 metres diameter (this has now been replaced
by a single 6.5m mirror). Its example was followed by
the Keck telescopes, with 10 m segmented mirrors.
The largest current telescopes have a primary mirror of
between 6 and 11 meters in diameter (for ground-based
telescopes). In this generation of telescopes, the mirror
is usually very thin, and is kept in an optimal shape
by an array of actuators (see active optics). This technology
has driven new designs for future telescopes with diameters
of 30, 50 and even 100 metres.
Relatively cheap, mass-produced ~2 meter telescopes have
recently been developed and have made a significant impact
on astronomy research. These allow many astronomical targets
to be monitored continuously, and for large areas of sky
to be surveyed. Many are robotic telescopes, computer
controlled over the internet (see e.g. the Liverpool Telescope
and the Faulkes Telescope North and South), allowing automated
follow-up of astronomical events.
Initially the detector used in telescopes was the human
eye. Later, the sensitized photographic plate took its
place, and the spectrograph was introduced, allowing the
gathering of spectral information. After the photographic
plate, successive generations of electronic detectors,
such as the charge-coupled device (CCDs), have been perfected,
each with more sensitivity and resolution, and often with
a wider wavelength coverage.
Current research telescopes have several instruments to
choose from: imagers, of different spectral responses;
spectrographs, useful in different regions of the spectrum;
polarimeters, that detect light polarization, etc.
The phenomenon of optical diffraction sets a limit to
the resolution and image quality that a telescope can
achieve, which is the effective area of the Airy disc,
which limits how close we may place two such discs. This
absolute limit is called Sparrow's resolution limit. This
limit depends on the wavelength of the studied light (so
that the limit for red light comes much earlier than the
limit for blue light) and on the diameter of the telescope
mirror. This means that a telescope with a certain mirror
diameter can resolve up to a certain limit at a certain
wavelength, so if you want more resolution at that very
wavelength, you have to build a wider mirror or perform
aperture synthesis using an array of nearby telescopes.
Famous optical telescopes

Hubble Space Telescope
orbits above Earth.
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* The Hubble Space Telescope is in orbit outside of the
Earth's atmosphere to allow for observations not distorted
by astronomical seeing, in this way they can be diffraction
limited, and used for coverage in the ultraviolet (UV)
and infrared.
* The Keck telescopes are currently (2005) the largest,
but will soon be superseded by the Gran Telescopio Canarias
and Southern African Large Telescope.
* The Very Large Telescope array (VLT) is currently (2002)
the record holder for total collecting area in an array
of telescopes, with four telescopes each 8 metres in diameter.
The four telescopes, belonging to ESO and located in the
Atacama desert in Chile, are usually operated independently
for faint astronomical observations, but up to three telescopes
can be operated together for aperture synthesis observations
of bright objects.
* The Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer is the optical
telescope (array) which can currently (2005) produce the
highest resolution images at visible wavelengths.
* The CHARA array is the telescope (array) which can currently
(2005) produce the highest resolution images at near-infrared
wavelengths.
* There are many plans for even larger telescopes. One
of them is the Overwhelmingly Large Telescope or OWL,
which is intended to have a single aperture of 100 metres
in diameter.
* The 200 inch (5.08 m) Hale telescope on Palomar Mountain
is a conventional research telescope that was the largest
for many years. It has a single borosilicate (Pyrex)
mirror that was famously difficult to construct. The mounting
is also unique, an equatorial mount that is not a fork,
yet permits the telescope to image near the north celestial
pole.
* The 100 inch (2.54 m) Hooker Telescope at the Mount
Wilson Observatory was used by Edwin Hubble to discover
galaxies, and the redshift. The mirror was made of green
glass by Saint-Gobain. In 1919 the telescope was used
for the first stellar diameter measurements using interferometry.
The telescope now has an adaptive optics system, and is
still useful for advanced research.
* The 1.02 m Yerkes Telescope (in Wisconsin) is the largest
aimable refractor in use.
* The 0.76 m Nice refractor (in France) that became operational
in 1888 was at that time the world's largest telescope.
This was the last time the most powerful operational telescope
in the world was located in Europe. It was outperformed
one year later by the 0.91 m refractor at the Lick Observatory.
* The largest refractor ever constructed was French. It
was on display at the 1900 Paris Exposition. Its lens
was stationary, prefigured so as to sag into the correct
shape. The telescope was aimed by the aid of a Foucault
sidérostat, which is a movable plane mirror with
a 2 m diameter, mounted in a large cast-iron frame. The
horizontal tube was 60 m long and the objective had 1.25
m in diameter. It was a failure.
* The 1-meter refracting Swedish Solar Telescope (SST)
on La Palma, currently the highest-resolution solar telescope
in the world.
See also
* Amateur telescope making
* Aperture synthesis
* Depth of field
* Eyepiece
* First light
* F-number
* History of telescopes
* Maksutov telescope
* Microscope
* Optical telescope
* Radio telescope
* Reflector telescope
* Refracting telescope
* Robotic telescope
* Timeline of telescopes, observatories, and observing
technology
Related lists
* List of largest optical reflecting telescopes
* List of largest optical refracting telescopes
* List of telescope types
See also
Monocular
Binoculars
Spotting scope
Nikon
8x42 Monarch ATB
Zhumell
7x50 Marine with Compass and Reticle
Zhumell
Bring em Near Pirate Spyglass 25x30
Swarovski
10x42 EL Binoculars
Binocular
Cases
teelscope, tleescope, talescopes, teelscopes, tleescopes,
terescopes, tlescopes, telecopes, telescops, telescopse,
telesocpes, etlescopes, elescopes, telescoe, tlescope,
teescope, telescoeps, telescpoes, telecope, telesope,
teescopes, telscopes, telecsopes, telsecopes, telescpe,
telscope,
This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "Telescope".
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