Chapter 5. Telescopes. Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
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1 Chapter 5 Telescopes Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
2 Why do we need Telescopes? Large collection area for photons than the eye long integration time compared with the eye Magnification Resolution --- telling details apart Transmission of the Atmosphere --- Why do we need telescopes in space?
3 Refraction
4 Refraction Dispersion causes different colors to travel at different speeds through the same material Refraction is responsible for the distortion of the Sun near the horizon, but not the Moon illusion
5 Refraction Refraction is also responsible for seeing Twinkling of stars AKA Scintillation Temperature and density differences in pockets of air shift the image of the star
6 Resolving Power A telescope s ability to discern detail is referred to as its resolving power Resolving power is limited by the wave nature of light through a phenomenon called diffraction Waves are diffracted as they pass through narrow openings A diffracted point source of light appears as a point surrounded by rings of light
7 Resolving Power and Aperture Two points of light separated by an angle α (in arcsec) can be seen at a wavelength λ only if the telescope diameter D (same units as λ ) satisfies: α λ/d
8 Refracting Telescopes A lens employs refraction to bend light Telescopes that employ lenses to collect and focus light are called refractors
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10 Disadvantages of Refractors Lenses have many disadvantages in large telescopes! Large lenses are extremely expensive to fabricate A large lens will sag in the center since it can only be supported on the edges Dispersion causes images to have colored fringes chromatic abberation
11 Reflecting Telescopes Reflectors Used almost exclusively by astronomers today Twin Keck telescopes, located on the 14,000 foot volcanic peak Mauna Kea in Hawaii, have 10-meter collector mirrors! Light is focused in front of the mirror
12 Reflecting Telescopes A secondary mirror may be used to deflect the light to the side or through a hole in the primary mirror Multi-mirror instruments and extremely thin mirrors are two modern approaches to dealing with large pieces of glass in a telescope system
13 Designs of Reflectors
14 MOSTLY OPTICAL and IR DESIGNS X-ray Nested Grazing Incidence mirrors
15 Very Large Array, New Mexico USA 3.5 m -- CTIO Chile optical wavelengths ARECIBO m Radio wavelengths
16 Radio Observatories
17 Increasing Resolving Power: Interferometers For a given wavelength, resolution is increased for a larger telescope diameter An interferometer accomplishes this by simultaneously combining observations from two or more widely-spaced telescopes
18 Interferometers The resolution is determined by the individual telescope separations and not the individual diameters of the telescopes themselves Key to the process is the wave nature of interference and the electronic processing of the waves from the various telescopes (phase difference φ=nλ=dsinθ)
19 TWIN KECK Telescopes Multi-mirror telescope Mount Kea Hawaii 10 m each mirror with 36 segments of 1.8m mirrors
20 AUXILLIARY INSTRUMENTS Guiding Systems Cameras Cooling systems (IR telescopes, Liquid N or He) Spectrographs (gratings that disperse light in wavelength) Detectors Charge Coupled Devices (CCD) Scintillation Counters Proportional Counter Arrays Multi-Channel Plates
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23 Atmospheric Blurring Twinkling of stars in sky, called scintillation, is caused by moving atmospheric irregularities refracting star light into a blend of paths to the eye The condition of the sky for viewing is referred to as the seeing Distorted seeing can be improved by adaptive optics, which employs a powerful laser and correcting mirrors to offset scintillation Active optics
24 Light Pollution
25 Where would you want to build an observatory on Earth? Remote regions Absorption of light needs to be minimized Good seeing conditions are necessary, not much turbulence in air Purity of air important and no humidity in air Therefore, high mountains, clear weather, no diffuse light from Cities, not too far from North or South of the Equator for maximum available sky (eg. between degree Latitutes)
26 Observatories on Earth The immense telescopes and their associated equipment require observatories to facilitate their use and protection. Thousands of observatories are scattered throughout the world and are on every continent including Antarctica Some large observatories: Twin 10-m Keck telescopes largest in US in Mauna Kea Hawaii m hexagonal segmented mirrors. The Hobby-Eberly Telescope uses 91 1-meter mirrors set in an 11meter disk; Davis Mountains, Texas,USA Largest optical telescope, VLT (Very Large Telescope) in Chile ESO, is an array of four 8.2-meter mirrors GTC 10.4-m Gran Telescope de Canaries 36 hexagonal components
27 Major Space Observatories Why put them in space?
28 OBSERVATORIES IN SPACE Microwave : COBE -- WMAP Infra Red : IRAS, ISO SPITZER, Planck, Herschel Optical : HST Ultra Violet : IUE, EUVE FUSE, GALEX X-Ray : ROSAT, ASCA, Beppo-Sax-RXTE, Chandra, Suzaku, XMM-Newton Gamma-Ray : GRO -- INTEGRAL, SWIFT, Fermi, AGILE
29 HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE April today 2.4 m mirror size 0.05 arcsec resolution kg 559 km 97 minutes
30 CHANDRA OBSERVATORY kev July mx1.2m 4790 kg km km 64.2 hours
31 MULTIWAVELENGTH STUDIES
32 Space vs.ground-based Observatories Space-Based Advantages Freedom from atmospheric blurring Freedom of atmospheric absorption Ground-Based Advantages Larger collecting power Equipment easily fixed Ground-Based Considerations Weather, humidity, and haze Light pollution
33 Going Observing To observe at a major observatory, an astronomer must: Submit a proposal to a committee that allocates telescope time If given observing time, assure all necessary equipment and materials will be available Be prepared to observe at various hours of the day Astronomers may also observe via the Internet Large data archives now exist for investigations covering certain wavelengths sometimes for the entire sky Archives help better prepare astronomers for onsite observations at an observatory
Chapter 5. Telescopes. Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
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