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Announcements • Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. • Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. • First project due October 13.
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Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Dec 18, 2015

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August Stokes
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Page 1: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Announcements

• Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6.

• Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before.

• First project due October 13.

Page 2: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Telescopes

2 October 2006

Page 3: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Today:

• Different telescope designs• Why bigger is better• Research telescopes, past and present• Light detectors• Telescopes for invisible “light” and other

signals• Amateur telescopes

Page 4: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Purpose of a telescope: Gather light over a large areaand focus it onto a small area

Method 1: Refraction (using a convex lens)

Disadvantages: Hard to make a large lens with two perfect surfaces; hard to support a large lens by edges; different colors are focused at slightly different distances

Page 5: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Purpose of a telescope: Gather light over a large areaand focus it onto a small area

Method 2: Reflection (using a concave mirror)

Disadvantage: Focal point is within the incoming light path.

Page 6: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Largest refractor and reflector

1-meter refractor, Yerkes Observatory, Wisconsin

10-meter reflector (Keck telescope), Mauna Kea, Hawaii

Page 7: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Light-gathering ability

A 10-meter telescope gathers 100 times as much light as a 1-meter telescope.

1 meter across

10 meters across

Page 8: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Resolving Power(Ability to see detail)

Wave behavior of light causes diffraction: bending at the edges of the telescope.

The wider the telescope’s lens or mirror, the less diffraction and the more detail can be resolved.

Light with a shorter wavelength also diffracts less.

But: Air turbulence usually causes even more blurring.

Page 9: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Reflector Designs

Diffraction spikes from secondary mirror supports

Page 10: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Early Telescopes

Galileo’s refractor

Newton’s reflector

Page 11: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

The first big reflectors

William Herschel’s largest telescope (late 1700’s)

Lord Rosse’s telescope (1840’s)

Page 12: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Large Photographic Telescopes

2.5 meter Hooker telescope, Mt. Wilson, California

Page 13: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Large Photographic Telescopes

5 meter Hale telescope, Mt. Palomar, California

Prime focus

Page 14: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Book Recommendation:

First Light, by Richard Preston. Describes the “Big Eye” and the other telescopes at Palomar Observatory, as well as the research done there and some of the more interesting researchers.

Page 15: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Light Detectors

• Human eye

• Photographic emulsions (late 1800’s)

• Electronic cameras (1970’s)

• Spectrographs (prisms or diffraction gratings) combined with one of the above

Page 16: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Other Wavelengths

Page 17: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Radio Telescopes

Page 18: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

HiRes Fly’s Eye Cosmic Ray Detector(Utah west desert)

Page 19: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Hubble Space Telescope

Page 20: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Other space telescopes

Infrared

X-ray

Page 21: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Advantages of space telescopes

• Observe wavelengths that don’t penetrate earth’s atmosphere

• Sharper images without atmospheric refraction (“twinkling”)

Mars from earth’s surface Mars from Hubble

• NASA has lots of money

Page 22: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Other signals (besides “light”)

• Cosmic rays (charged subatomic particles that collide with earth’s atmosphere)

• Neutrinos (highly penetrating particles, given off by sun and other stars)

• Gravitational waves (not yet detected directly)

Page 23: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Neutrino Detectors

Page 24: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Gravitational Wave Detectors (LIGO)

Hanford, WA Livingston, LA

Proposed “LISA” detector in solar orbit

Page 25: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Telescopes for amateur use

• Binoculars

• Small refractors

• Dobsonian reflectors

• Motor-driven telescopes

Page 26: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Binoculars

Great for viewing the moon, Jupiter’s moons, Milky Way, and several of the brighter star clusters, nebulae, and galaxies.

7 x 50 (my favorite)Mostly for daytime use

Too big to hold steady

Page 27: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Small Refractors

OK for viewing moon and planets, IF the mount is steady. Usually a major disappointment. Beware of cheap department store brands! High-magnification eyepieces are useless.

Page 28: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Dobsonian ReflectorsThese are Newtonian reflectors with a simple mounting system designed by John Dobson. Versatile, economical, and very easy to use! Sizes range from 4.5 inches to 25 inches and more.

Page 29: Announcements Turn in Homework 5, pick up Homework 6. Another test this week! Same days (W,Th), same format as before. First project due October 13.

Motor-Driven TelescopesFor the serious amateur astronomer/astrophotographer. Rather expensive compared to Dobsonians.