Telescopes and Spacecraft
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Transcript Telescopes and Spacecraft
Telescopes
Astronomy 315
Professor Lee Carkner
Lecture 5
Blue star is hotter than red star
From Wien’s law: short
wavelength means higher
temperature
T (1/l)
Image looks larger in photograph
How can the red star be brighter
even though it is cooler?
Stefan-Boltzmann law
P AT4
What colors are easy/hard to
see?
Eye is least sensitive to violet and
red
Alberio
Star Colors
What temperature are red, yellow and blue stars?
Wein’s Law: 3,000,000/T = l
Multiply each side by T
Divide each side by l
Red: l = 650 nm
3,000,000/650 =
Yellow: l = 575 nm
3,000,000/575 =
Blue: l = 475 nm
3,000,000/475 =
History of Observing
The earliest observing was done with the naked eye
Around 1600 telescopes were invented
Around 1670 Isaac Newton invented a telescope
that used mirrors instead of lenses
In 1990 the Hubble Space Telescope was placed in
orbit, capping a decade of spaced-base observing
Galileo’s Observations
How Do Telescopes Work?
Telescopes:
Light gathering ability (not
magnification) is the most important
attribute of a telescope
telescopes make faint things brighter
Lenses
Need a lens
Lenses bend light (refraction) and focus
all of the light incident on the front to a
point (focus) a certain distance behind
the lens (focal length)
Lenses and Refraction
Refracting Telescope
If you put a second lens (eyepiece) behind the
first lens(objective), you can magnify the
image
Magnification is equal to the ratio of the focal
lengths
in practice the magnification you can achieve is
limited by the blurring effects of the Earth’s
atmosphere
Refracting Telescope
Refractors and Reflectors
It is hard to make large refracting
telescopes
A curved mirror can be used to gather
and focus the light instead (reflecting
telescope)
Reflecting Telescopes
Problem: The focal point is between
the mirror and the sky
Cassegrain Telescope -- secondary
reflects light through a hole in the
primary, most common type of large
telescope
Cassegrain Reflecting
Telescope
Path of Light
Light beams enter from infinity and are
initially parallel
The eyepieces then magnifies the point
image by taking the divergent rays
from the focal and making them
parallel again
Telescope Misconceptions
Magnification is the most important
property of a telescope
Astronomers peer through an eyepiece
Telescopes stick out of the dome
Telescopes fold up like a giant pirate’s
spyglass
Observing at Different
Wavelengths
To fully understand the universe you need
telescopes that can observe all forms of
radiation
Space based astronomy began in the 1970’s and
became very important in the 1980’s-1990’s
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Telescope Taxonomy
Radio and Millimeter -- penetrates atmosphere
and everything else
Example:
Infrared (IR) -- we feel as heat
Example:
Optical -- what our eyes can see
Example --
More Telescope Taxonomy
Ultraviolet (UV) -- high energy radiation,
causes sunburn
Example --
X-ray -- very high energy
Example --
Gamma Ray -- the highest energy
Example --
The VLA
Hubble Space Telescope
What Can a Telescope Do?
Imaging -Photometry -Spectroscopy -A spectrum is the amount of light at each
wavelength.
The shape of the spectrum tells you about the
temperature, composition and motions of the
object
Types of Detectors
Eye --
Photographic plate -- allows you to measure
brightness and spectra
Charge Coupled Device (CCD) --
Today, light is moved around with fiber optic
cables and data is moved electronically
Next Time
Read Ch. 3.5, 4.1-4.3