Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

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Telescopes Amateur and Professional
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Transcript of Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Page 1: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Telescopes

Amateur and Professional

Page 2: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Galileo 1609

Page 3: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

The Moon as a World

Page 4: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Jupiter has Moons

Page 5: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.
Page 6: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Refracting telescopes

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Long focus refractors were awkward but suffered less from chromatic aberration

Page 9: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Isaac Newton’s reflecting telescope

Mirrors do not havechromatic aberration

Page 10: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Reflecting telescope

Objective mirrors instead of lenses

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Three Powers

• Magnifying

• Resolving

• Light Gathering

Page 12: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Magnifying 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

Page 13: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Resolving Power

• Ability to see fine detail

• Depends on the diameter of the objective lens or mirror

Page 14: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Light 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

Page 15: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Herschel & Lord Rosse

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19th century: epoch of the large refractors

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Refracting telescopes

Vienna

Lick

Page 18: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

YerkesObservatory

Largest refractingtelescope with aone meter objective

Page 19: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

20th century Large Reflectors Come of Age

Mount Wilson Observatory 1.5m (1908) and 2.5m (1918)

Page 20: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Palomar 5-m(entered operation in 1948)

Page 21: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

4 meter Reflectingtelescope

Page 22: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Objective Mirror

Page 23: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Dome of 4 meterKitt Peak

Page 24: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Keck Telescopes

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SOAR Telescope

4.1 meter

Page 26: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

SOAR Telescope -- Cerro Pachon

Page 27: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

SOAR Observing Room

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SOAR Image of the planetary nebula NGC 2440

Page 29: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

MSU Campus Observatory

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Boller & Chivens reflecting telescope with a 24-inch objective mirror

Page 31: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

More 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

Page 32: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

A more general expression for the theoretical resolving power

• Imagine that star images look like Airy disks

Page 33: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Minimum Angle that can be resolved

• R = 1.22 x 206,265 / dR = resolution in seconds of arc

= 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

Page 34: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Examples

• For Visible light around 500nmOur 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

Page 35: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Astronomical “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

Page 36: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Bad seeing onthis side

Good seeingon this side

Page 37: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Electromagnetic Spectrum

Page 38: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Radio TelescopesArecibo

Page 39: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Very Large Array

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Radio 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

Page 41: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Very Large Array

Page 42: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Interferometry

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

Page 43: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Observing from space

• No clouds

• Perfect seeing

• Can see wavelengths of light blocked by the earth’s atmosphere

Page 44: Telescopes Amateur and Professional. Galileo 1609.

Hubble Space Telescope

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Rooftop telescopes