User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
telescopes- Plural of telescope
Extensive Definition
A telescope is an instrument designed for the
observation of remote objects and the collection of electromagnetic
radiation. The first known practically functioning telescope is
credited to the German-Dutch lensmaker Hans
Lippershey in 1608. The name
"Telescope" (from the Greek tele
= 'far' and skopein = 'to look or see'; teleskopos = 'far-seeing')
was a name given to Galileo
Galilei's instrument for viewing distant objects. The name was
invented by an unidentified Greek poet/theologian, present at a
banquet held in 1611 by Prince Federico
Cesi to make Galileo
Galilei a member of the Accademia
dei Lincei. "Telescope" can refer to a whole range of
instruments operating in most regions of the electromagnetic
spectrum.
Types of telescopes
The name "telescope" covers a wide range of instruments and is difficult to define. They all have the attribute of collecting electromagnetic radiation so it can be studied or analyzed in some manner. The most common type is the optical telescope. Other types also exist and are listed below.Optical telescopes
An optical telescope gathers and focuses light mainly from the visible part of the Electromagnetic spectrum (although some work in the infrared and ultraviolet). Optical telescopes increase the apparent angular size of distant objects, as well as their apparent brightness. Telescopes work by employing one or more curved optical elements - usually made from glass - lenses or mirrors - to gather light or other electromagnetic radiation and bring that light or radiation to a focus, where the image can be observed, photographed, studied, or sent to a computer. Optical telescopes are used for astronomy and in many non-astronomical instruments, including: theodolites (including transits), spotting scopes, monoculars, binoculars, camera lenses, and spyglasses. There are three main types:- The refracting telescope which uses lenses to form an image.
- The reflecting telescope which uses an arrangement of mirrors form an image.
- The catadioptric telescope which uses mirrors combined with lenses, in front of the mirror or somewhere within the optical path, to form an image.
Radio telescopes
Radio telescopes are directional radio antennae that often have a parabolic shape. The dishes are sometimes constructed of a conductive wire mesh whose openings are smaller than the wavelength being observed. Multi-element Radio telescopes are constructed from pairs or larger groups of these dishes to synthesize large "virtual" apertures that are similar in size to the separation between the telescopes: see aperture synthesis. As of 2005, the current record array size is many times the width of the Earth, utilizing space-based Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) telescopes such as the Japanese HALCA (Highly Advanced Laboratory for Communications and Astronomy) VSOP (VLBI Space Observatory Program) satellite. Aperture synthesis is now also being applied to optical telescopes using optical interferometers (arrays of optical telescopes) and Aperture Masking Interferometry at single reflecting telescopes. Radio telescopes are also used to collect microwave radiation, often used to help study the leftover Big Bang radiation, and also can be used to collect radiation when visible light is obstructed or faint, such as from quasars. Some radio telescopes are used by programs such as SETI and the Arecibo Observatory to search for exterrestrial life. (see also: Wow! Signal)X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes
X-ray and gamma-ray radiation go through most metals and glasses, some X-ray telescopes use Wolter telescopes composed of 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 and a hyperbola or ellipse. Gamma-ray telescopes refrain from focusing completely, and use coded aperture masks; the pattern of shadows the mask creates can be reconstructed to form an image.These types of telescopes are usually on
Earth-orbiting satellites or high-flying
balloons, since the Earth's
atmosphere is opaque to this part of the electromagnetic
spectrum.
Other types
Notable telescopes
- Anglo-Australian Telescope
- Arecibo Observatory
- Atacama Large Millimeter Array
- Chandra X-ray Observatory
- CHARA (Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy) array
- Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope
- Great Paris Exhibition Telescope of 1900
- Hale telescope
- Hexapod-Telescope
- Hooker Telescope
- Hubble Space Telescope
- IceCube Neutrino Detector
- Isaac Newton Telescope
- Keck telescope
- Lick Observatory
- LIGO
- Lovell Telescope
- McMath-Pierce Solar Telescope
- McMath-Hulbert Observatory (Solar)
- Magdalena Ridge Observatory
- Multiple-Mirror telescope
- Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer
- Overwhelmingly Large Telescope (proposed)
- Parkes Observatory
- Southern African Large Telescope
- Subaru Telescope
- UK Schmidt Telescope
- Very Large Array
- Very Large Telescope
- Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
- William Herschel Telescope
- XMM-Newton
See also
- Amateur telescope making
- Angular resolution
- Aperture synthesis
- ASCOM open standards for computer control of telescopes
- BOOTES
- Depth of field
- Dynameter
- Eyepiece
- First light
- f-number
- History of telescopes
- Keyhole problem
- List of largest optical reflecting telescopes
- List of largest optical refracting telescopes
- Microscope
- Nimrud lens
- Remote Telescope Markup Language
- Robotic telescope
- Space observatory
- Timeline of telescope technology
- Timeline of telescopes, observatories, and observing technology
Notes
References
- Contemporary Astronomy - Second Edition, Jay M. Pasachoff, Saunders Colleges Publishing - 1981, ISBN 0-03-057861-2
External links
- "The First Telescopes". Part of an exhibit from Cosmic Journey: A History of Scientific Cosmology by the American Institute of Physics
- ESO 100 m telescope
- The Resolution of a Telescope
- Southern African Large Telescope (SALT)
- The Digges telescope of the 1570s
- The Swedish Solar telescope
- History of Refracting Telescope
telescopes in Tosk Albanian: Teleskop
telescopes in Arabic: مقراب
telescopes in Asturian: Telescopiu
telescopes in Bosnian: Teleskop
telescopes in Bulgarian: Телескоп
telescopes in Catalan: Telescopi
telescopes in Czech: Dalekohled
telescopes in Corsican: Telescopiu
telescopes in Danish: Kikkert
telescopes in German: Teleskop
telescopes in Estonian: Teleskoop
telescopes in Modern Greek (1453-):
Τηλεσκόπιο
telescopes in Spanish: Telescopio
telescopes in Esperanto: Teleskopo
telescopes in Basque: Teleskopio
telescopes in Persian: تلسکوپ
telescopes in French: Télescope
telescopes in Galician: Telescopio
telescopes in Korean: 망원경
telescopes in Hindi: दूरदर्शी
telescopes in Croatian: Teleskop
telescopes in Indonesian: Teleskop
telescopes in Italian: Telescopio
telescopes in Hebrew: טלסקופ
telescopes in Georgian: ტელესკოპი
telescopes in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Darubini
telescopes in Latin: Telescopium
telescopes in Latvian: Teleskops
telescopes in Luxembourgish: Teleskop
telescopes in Lithuanian: Teleskopas
telescopes in Hungarian: Távcső
telescopes in Malayalam: ദൂരദര്ശിനി
telescopes in Dutch: Telescoop (optica)
telescopes in Japanese: 望遠鏡
telescopes in Neapolitan: Ucchiarone
telescopes in Norwegian: Teleskop
telescopes in Polish: Teleskop
telescopes in Portuguese: Telescópio
telescopes in Romanian: Telescop
telescopes in Russian: Телескоп
telescopes in Albanian: Teleskopi
telescopes in Sicilian: Telescopiu
telescopes in Simple English: Telescope
telescopes in Slovak: Teleskop
telescopes in Slovenian: Daljnogled
telescopes in Serbian: Телескоп
telescopes in Serbo-Croatian: Teleskop
telescopes in Finnish: Kaukoputki
telescopes in Swedish: Teleskop
telescopes in Telugu: టెలీస్కోపు
telescopes in Thai: กล้องโทรทรรศน์
telescopes in Vietnamese: Kính viễn vọng
telescopes in Cherokee: ᎠᎧᏔᏘ
telescopes in Turkish: Teleskop
telescopes in Ukrainian: Телескоп
telescopes in Yiddish: טעלעסקאפ
telescopes in Chinese: 望远镜