Telescope
A
telescope
is
perhaps
the
most
important
astronomical
tool;
such
technology
gathers
(and
focuses)
electromagnetic
radiation.
Telescopes
increase
the
apparent
angular
size
of
objects,
as
well
as
their
apparent
brightness.
Galileo
is
credited
with
being
the
first
to
use
a
telescope
for
astronomical
purposes.
Telescopes
used
for
non-astronomical
purposes
are
often
referred
to
as
transits,
spotting
scopes,
monoculars,
binoculars,
camera
lenses,
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
nearly
the
width
of
the
Earth.
Aperture
synthesis
is
now
also
being
applied
to
optical
telescopes.
X-ray
and
gamma-ray
telescopes
have
a
problem
because
the
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.
Telescope
mountings
The
simpliest
telescope
mounting
is
an
altazimuth
mount.
It
is
similar
to
that
of
a
surveying
transit.
A
fork
rotates
in
azimuth,
and
bearings
on
the
tips
of
the
fork
allow
the
telescope
to
vary
in
altitude.
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
many
small
telescopes
is
to
tip
the
altazimuth
so
that
the
azimuth
axis
is
parallel
with
the
axis
of
the
Earth's
rotation,
this
is
known
as
equatorial
mount.
Very
large
telescopes
typically
use
a
computer-controlled
altazimuth
mount,
and
for
long
exposures,
they
have
(usually
computer-controlled)
variable-rate
rotating
erector
prisms
at
the
focus.
Research
Telescopes
Most
large
research
telescopes
can
operate
as
either
a
cassegrainian
(longer
focal
length,
and
a
narrower
field
with
higher
magnification)
or
newtonian
(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,
a
synthetic
aperture
composed
of
six
segments
synthesizing
a
mirror
of
4.5
meters
diameter.
Its
example
was
followed
by
the
Keck
telescopes,
a
synthetic-aperture
10
meter
telescope.
The
current
generation
of
telescopes
being
constructed
have
a
primary
mirror
of
between
6
and
8
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
meters.
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
CCDs,
have
been
perfected,
each
with
more
sensitivity
and
resolution.
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.
In
recent
years,
some
technologies
to
overcome
the
bad
effect
of
atmosphere
on
ground-based
telescopes
were
developed,
with
good
results.
See
tip-tilt
mirror
and
adaptive
optics.
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.
Famous
Telescopes
-
The
Hubble
space
telescope
is
in
orbit
outside
of
the
Earth's
atmosphere
to
allow
for
observations
not
distorted
by
refraction,
in
this
way
they
can
be
diffraction
limited,
and
used
for
coverage
in
the
ultraviolet
(UV)
and
infrared.
-
The
Very
Large
Telescope
(VLT)
is
currently
(2002)
the
record
holder
in
size,
with
four
telescopes
each
8
meters
in
diameter.
The
four
telescopes,
belonging
to
ESO
and
located
in
the
Atacama
desert
in
Chile,
can
operate
independently
or
together.
-
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
meters
in
diameter.
-
The
200
inch
Hale
telescope
at
Mt.
Palomar
is
a
conventional
research
telescope
that
was
the
largest
for
many
years.
It
has
a
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