When you think of telescopes, what do you think of first? A long tube that astronomers look through to
the stars on a dark night? That is true. But it is only one type of telescope. There are telescopes on
the ground and in space to watch planets, stars, and galaxies.
A short introduction can be found in this
video from the BBC Earth Lab.
In this chapter we only consider optical telescopes. The earliest optical telescopes we know of
were made in 1608 in the Netherlands by various optical craftsmen. One of them, Hans Lippershey,
publicized his design well enough that the news reached Galileo Galilei in Italy 1609. When
Galileo heard of the telescope, he built his own. Within a year, he had greatly improved Lippershey's
design and promoted his own telescopes. He also observed Jupiter's largest moons. These are the reasons
why when many people hear the words "invention of the telescope", they think of Galileo.
How do optical telescopes work?
Let us consider a basic optical telescope. If you were looking to buy a telescope for yourself, you
will learn that there are two basic designs:
- refracting telescopes, also known as refractors
- reflecting telescopes, also known as reflectors
A refractor uses lenses within a tube to refract (bend) light. This is the type of
long telescope which you might imagine old-time astronomers like Galileo using. Reflectors, on the
other hand, use mirrors instead of lenses to reflect light.
Most modern observatories use reflectors because their telescopes are so huge. Refractors would
not be practical, since their lenses would be very have and their tubes very long.
The larges refractive telescope every constructed for astronomical research is housed in the
Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay,
Wisconsin. It's main lens has a diameter of 1.02 m, and the main tube is 18 m long.
What are the parts of a refracting telescope?
A refracting telescope is made of a long tube containing lenses. The objetive lens is
the front lens. In other words, it is the lens at the end where the light comes in. The other end of
the tube contains the eyepiece or ocular lens. You look with your eyes through the
eyepiece into the telescope.
In a refracting telescope, light enters the telescope near the objective lens. The objective lens is a
convex lens. This lens converges the light at the focal point of the lens. From that point on
they begin to diverge again. A second convex lens in the eyepiece takes the converging light and
straightens it back out. (Review ray rules for convex (converging) lenses.). This
process magnifies the image at the focal point and brings it into focus. For that reason a refracting
telescope needs to have a long path to allow the light rays to bend.
Ray tracing in the refracting telescope
The refracting telescope consists of two converging lenses: the objective with focal length
fo and the eyepiece with focal length fe.
The incoming parallel rays from are focused in the second focal plane of the objective (behind the
objective lens). This intermediate image must lie in the first focal plane (in front) of the eyepiece
in order to have parallel outgoing rays.
Thus, the spacing between the two lenses L must equal
the sum of the two focal lengths, fo + fe.
The magnification of a telescope is large if the intermediate image is large, and if this image is
viewed through an eyepiece (magnifying glass) of large magnificationr:
Telescope magnification = -fo / fe
The negative sign in this expression means that if both focal lengths are positive, the image is
inverted.
However, increasing the intermediate image's distance from the objective spreads the incoming light
over the larger intermediate image, which thus becomes dimmer. This is unfortunate because a telescope
is often used to look at objects that are dim to begin with, making light-gathering ability important.
In order for a longer focal length objective to produce the same brightness as a shorter one, we must
have a larger diameter in the former. That is, we get the same brightness if we keep the f-number the
same (remember the camera!). Most astronomical telescopes of this type operate between f/12 and f/15.
For this reason, a telescope is usually not specified by its focal length, but rather by the diameter
of the objective lens. For example, we speak of a 6-inch telescope when we refer to one with a 6-inch
objective diameter. The largest objective lens is in the 40-inch Yerkes Observatory telescope in
Williams Bay, Wisconsin.
Ohio University is the home of a 10-inch telescope at the
Ohio
University Observatory, where you may catch a glimpse at the stars during a Public Telescope
Night.
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