All devices we use to see the sky For instance, telescopes can be on land or in orbit. Telescopes can help us focus on objects that emit visual light,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Astronomy Notes to Accompany the Text
Advertisements

Chapter 6: Telescopes – Portals of Discovery. Visible light is only one type of electromagnetic radiation emitted by stars Each type of EM radiation travels.
Optics and Telescopes Chapter Six. Telescopes The fundamental purpose of any telescope is to gather more light than the naked eye can In many cases telescopes.
Chapter 5 Telescopes. 5.1 Optical Telescopes The Hubble Space Telescope 5.2 Telescope Size The Hubble Space Telescope 5.3 Images and Detectors Diffraction.
Chapter 24: Studying the Sun (and other stars)
Light and Telescopes Please pick up your assigned transmitter
Foundations of Physics
Telescopes Analyzing electromagnetic spectra to search for understanding of celestial objects.
Chapter 6 Optics and Telescopes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5.
1 Earth’s Atmosphere & Telescopes Whether light is absorbed by the atmosphere or not depends greatly on its wavelength. Earth’s atmosphere can absorb certain.
Optics and Telescopes Chapter Six.
The Origin of Modern Astronomy Chapter 4:. Isaac Newton 1689.
Astronomy 101 Section 020 Lecture 6 Optics and Telescopes John T. McGraw, Professor Laurel Ladwig, Planetarium Manager.
Telescopes (Chapter 6). Based on Chapter 6 This material will be useful for understanding Chapters 7 and 10 on “Our planetary system” and “Jovian planet.
Reading Unit 28, Unit 29, Unit 30 Will not be covered by the first exam.
This Set of Slides This set of slides deals with telescopes. Units covered: 26, 27, 28, 29, and 30.
Optics and Telescopes Chapter Six.
Telescopes. Magnification (make things look bigger) easy to make a telescope with good magnification Collection of large amounts of light (see fainter.
Question 1 Modern telescopes use mirrors rather than lenses for all of these reasons EXCEPT 1) Light passing through lenses can be absorbed or scattered.
Chapter 17 Optics 17.1 Reflection and Refraction
Telescopes Section 15.1.
Telescopes Chapter 5. Objectives   Telescopes……………Chapter 5 Objectives:   1. To list the parts of a telescope.   2. To describe how mirrors aid.
Land Based Telescopes. Telescopes: "light buckets" Primary functions: 1. ___________ from a given region of sky. 2. ______ light. Secondary functions:
Reflective Refractive Spectro scopy Space Large telescopes How Optical works $ 200 $ 200$200 $ 200 $ 200 $400 $ 400$400 $ 400$400 $600 $ 600$600 $
Chapter 5.
Chapter 5 Telescopes: “light bucket”. Telescopes have three functions 1.Gather as much light as possible: LGP ∝ Area = πR 2 LGP ∝ Area = πR 2 Why? Why?
4. Telescopes Light gathering power and resolution Optical and radio telescopes Limitations of Earth’s atmosphere and satellite missions. Instruments (prism.
Chapter 6: The Tools of the Astronomer. Telescopes come in two general types Refractors use lenses to bend the light to a focus Reflectors use mirrors.
Chapter 3 Light and Telescopes. What do you think? What is the main purpose of a telescope? Why do stars twinkle?
Radiation & Telescopes ____________ radiation: Transmission of energy through space without physical connection through varying electric and magnetic fields.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 6 Telescopes: Portals of Discovery.
Optics and Telescopes. Optics and Telescopes: Guiding Questions 1.How do reflecting and refracting telescopes work? 2.Why is it important that professional.
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley Telescopes.
Tools for Studying Space. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Telescopes.
Telescopes: Portals of Discovery
Astronomical Tools. Essential Questions 1.What is Light? 2.How do telescopes work, and how are they limited? 3.What kind of instruments do astronomers.
Optics and Telescope Chapter Six. ASTR 111 – 003 Fall 2007 Lecture 06 Oct. 09, 2007 Introducing Astronomy (chap. 1-6) Introduction To Modern Astronomy.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 Telescopes: Portals of Discovery. 6.1 Eyes and Cameras: Everyday Light Sensors Our goals for learning How does your eye form an image? How do.
Optics and Telescopes Chapter Six. Introducing Astronomy (chap. 1-6) Introduction To Modern Astronomy I Ch1: Astronomy and the Universe Ch2: Knowing the.
Clicker Questions Chapter 3 Telescopes Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Section 1 – pg 590 Telescopes
Units to cover 25, Types of Spectra Kirchoff ’ s Laws: –If the source emits light that is continuous, and all colors are present, we say that this.
Telescopes. Light Hitting a Telescope Mirror huge mirror near a star * * * small mirror far from 2 stars In the second case (reality), light rays from.
Telescopes Lecture. Standards Understand how knowledge about the universe comes from evidence collected from advanced technology (e.g., telescopes, satellites,
1 Earth’s Atmosphere & Telescopes Whether light is absorbed by the atmosphere or not depends greatly on its wavelength. Earth’s atmosphere can absorb certain.
Refraction P 7.2 LIGHT TELESCOPES AND IMAGES. You should understand that the wave speed will change if a wave moves from one medium into another a change.
Chapter 21: Stars, Galaxies, Universe Section 1: telescopes
Astronomy: A Beginner’s Guide to the Universe Seventh Edition © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 3 Lecture Telescopes.
ISP Astronomy Gary D. Westfall1Lecture 7 Telescopes Galileo first used a telescope to observe the sky in 1610 The main function of a telescope is.
Sponge: Draw the four types of reflectors.. Light from different directions focuses at different points, and an image is formed near the prime focus.
The Very Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico. Observations at wavelengths other than visible light are revealing previously invisible sights Visible light.
Universe Tenth Edition Chapter 6 Optics and Telescopes Roger Freedman Robert Geller William Kaufmann III.
Telescopes. Light Hitting a Telescope Mirror huge mirror near a star * * small mirror far from a star In the second case (reality), light rays from any.
다양한 창문을 통한 우주 내용 왜 다양한 창문 ? 왜 다양한 창문 ? 대기의 영향 대기의 영향 망원경의 성능 망원경의 성능 관측에서 얻는 정보 관측에서 얻는 정보 중요 망원경들 중요 망원경들 차세대 망원경들 차세대 망원경들.
Before, you learned Objects in the universe are grouped together in different ways The motions of planets and other nearby objects are visible from Earth.
Telescopes & Light. History Hans Lippershey Middleburg, Holland –invented the refractor telescope in 1608 Galileo –the first to use a telescope in astronomy.
Optics and Telescopes Chapter Six. Some Guiding Questions 1.Why is it important that telescopes be large? 2.Why do most modern telescopes use a large.
Chapter 6 Telescopes: Portals of Discovery
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Telescopes.
Light and Telescopes
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Chapter 5 Telescopes.
Sponge: Draw the four types of reflectors.
Telescopes allow us to study space from Earth.
4. Telescopes Light gathering power and resolution
Optics and Telescopes Chapter Six.
Telescopes Lecture.
Presentation transcript:

All devices we use to see the sky For instance, telescopes can be on land or in orbit. Telescopes can help us focus on objects that emit visual light, And also other types of light.

telescope Instrument used to capture as many photons as possible from a given region of the sky and concentrate them into a focused beam for analysis. a "light bucket" whose primary function is to capture as many photons as possible from a given region of the sky and concentrate them into a focused beam for analysis.

reflecting telescope A telescope which uses a mirror to gather and focus light from a distant object. refracting telescope A telescope which uses a lens to gather and focus light from a distant object.

The mirror is constructed so that all light rays arriving parallel to its axis, are reflected to pass through a single point, called the focus. regardless of their distance from that axis. This is usually called the primary mirror because telescopes often contain more than one mirror,

A refracting telescope uses a lens to focus the incoming light. Refraction is the bending of a beam of light as it passes from one transparent medium (for example, air) into another (such as glass). i.e. a pencil half immersed in a glass of water looks bent. the light by which we see it is bent—refracted—as that light leaves the water and enters the air.

Refraction by a prism changes the direction of a light ray by an amount that depends on the angle between the faces of the prism.

A lens can be thought of as a series of prisms. A light ray traveling along the axis of a lens is unrefracted as it passes through the lens. Parallel rays arriving at progressively greater distances from the axis are refracted by increasing amounts, in such a way that all are focused to a single point.

Astronomical telescopes are often used to make images of their field of view. illustrates how this is accomplished, in this case by the mirror in a reflecting telescope. Any ray of light entering the instrument parallel to the telescope's axis strikes the mirror and is reflected through the prime focus. Light coming from a slightly different direction—inclined slightly to the axis—is focused to a slightly different point. In this way, an image is formed near the prime focus. Each point on the image corresponds to a different point in the field of view. Light from a distant object (in this case, a comet) reaches us as parallel, or very nearly parallel, rays.

The prime-focus images produced by large telescopes are actually quite small—the image of the entire field of view may be as little as 1 cm across. Often, the image is magnified with a lens known as an eyepiece before being observed by eye or, more likely, recorded as a photograph or digital image. Figure (a) shows the basic design of a simple reflecting telescope, illustrating how a small secondary mirror and eyepiece are used to view the image. Figure (b) shows how a refracting telescope accomplishes the same function.

Both types are used to gather and focus cosmic radiation—to be observed by human eyes or recorded on photographs or in computers. In both cases the image formed at the focus is viewed with a small magnifying lens called an eyepiece. The two telescope designs shown achieve the same result—light from a distant object is captured and focused to form an image. It might appear that there is little to choose between the two in deciding which type to buy or build. However, as telescope size has steadily increased over the years, a number of important factors have tended to favor reflecting instruments over refractors:

1.The fact that light must pass through the lens is a major disadvantage of refracting telescopes. Large lenses cannot be constructed in such a way that light passes through them uniformly. Just as a prism disperses white light into its component colors, the lens in a refracting telescope focuses red and blue light differently. This deficiency is known as chromatic aberration.

2. As light passes through the lens, some of it is absorbed by the glass. This absorption is a relatively minor problem for visible radiation, but it can be severe for infrared and ultraviolet observations because glass blocks most of the radiation coming from those regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. This problem obviously does not affect mirrors.

3.A large lens can be quite heavy. Because it can be supported only around its edge (so as not to block the incoming radiation), the lens tends to deform under its own weight. A mirror does not have this drawback because it can be supported over its entire back surface.

4. A lens has two surfaces that must be accurately machined and polished, which can be very difficult, but a mirror has only one.

A prism bends blue light more than it bends red light, so the blue component of light passing through a lens is focused slightly closer to the lens than is the red component. As a result, the image of an object acquires a colored "halo," no matter where we place our detector. lens Blue focus Red focus White Light Green focus

This shows the world's largest refractor, installed in 1897 at the Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin and still in use today. It has a lens diameter of 1 m (about 40 inches). By contrast, some new reflecting telescopes have mirror diameters in the 10 m range, and larger instruments are on the way.

Four reflecting telescope designs: (a) prime focus, (b) Newtonian focus, (c) Cassegrain focus, and (d) coudé focus. Each uses a primary mirror at the bottom of the telescope to capture radiation, which is then directed along different paths for analysis. Notice that the secondary mirrors shown in (c) and (d) are actually slightly diverging, so that they move the focus outside the telescope.

Astronomers generally prefer large telescopes over small ones, for two main reasons. 1. light-gathering power. 2. resolving power.

One reason for using a larger telescope is simply that it has a greater collecting area—the total area of a telescope capable of capturing radiation collecting area The total area of a telescope that is capable of capturing incoming radiation. The larger the telescope, the greater its collecting area, and the fainter the objects it can detect.

The observed brightness of an astronomical object is directly proportional to the area of our telescope's mirror and therefore to the square of the mirror diameter. Thus, a 5-m telescope will produce an image 25 times as bright as a 1-m instrument because a 5-m mirror has 5 2 =25 times the collecting area of a 1-m mirror. We can also think of this relationship in terms of the length of time required for a telescope to collect enough energy to create a recognizable image on a photographic plate.

A 5-m telescope will produce an image 25 times faster than the 1 m device because it gathers energy at a rate 25 times greater. Expressed in another way, a 1-hour time exposure with a 1-m telescope is roughly equivalent to a 2.4-minute time exposure with a 5-m instrument.

angular resolution The ability of a telescope to distinguish between adjacent objects in the sky.

Two comparably bright light sources become progressively clearer when viewed at finer and finer angular resolution. When the angular resolution is much poorer than the separation of the objects, as at the top, the objects appear as a single fuzzy "blob.” As the resolution improves, the two sources become discernible as separate objects.

In general, resolution refers to the ability of any device, such as a camera or a telescope, to form distinct, separate images of objects lying close together in the field of view. The finer the resolution, the better we can distinguish the objects and the more detail we can see

Detail becomes clearer in the Andromeda Galaxy as the angular resolution is improved some 600 times, from (a) 10', to (b) 1', (c) 5", and (d) 1". d ab c

What limits a telescope's resolution? One important factor is diffraction, the tendency of light, and all other waves for that matter, to bend around corners Because of diffraction, when a parallel beam of light enters a telescope, the rays spread out slightly, making it impossible to focus the beam to a sharp point, even with a perfectly constructed mirror

The degree of fuzziness—the minimum angular separation that can be distinguished—determines the angular resolution of the telescope. The amount of diffraction is proportional to the wavelength of the radiation divided by the diameter of the telescope mirror. As a result we can write, in convenient units,

(a) The world's highest ground-based observatory, at Mauna Kea, Hawaii, is perched atop an extinct volcano more than 4 km above sea level. Among the domes visible in the picture are those that house the Canada— France—Hawaii 3.6-m telescope, the 2.2-m telescope of the University of Hawaii, Britain's 3.8-m infrared facility, and the twin 10-m Keck telescopes. To the right of the twin Kecks is the Japanese 8.3-m Subaru telescope, still under construction. The thin air at this high-altitude site guarantees less atmospheric absorption of incoming radiation and hence a clearer view than at sea level, but the air is so thin that astronomers must occasionally wear oxygen masks while working

The 10-m mirror in the first Keck telescope. Note the technician in orange coveralls at center.

Astronomers use the term seeing to describe the effects of atmospheric turbulence. The circle over which a star's light (or the light from any other astronomical source) is spread is called the seeing disk. *In fact, for a large instrument—more than about 1 m in diameter—the situation is more complicated, because rays striking different parts of the mirror have actually passed through different turbulent atmospheric regions. The end result is still a seeing disk, however.

Individual photons from a distant star strike the detector in a telescope at slightly different locations because of turbulence in Earth's atmosphere. Over time, the individual photons cover a roughly circular region on the detector, and even the point-like image of a star is recorded as a small disk, called the seeing disk.

To achieve the best possible seeing, telescopes are sited on mountaintops (to get above as much of the atmosphere as possible) in regions of the world where the atmosphere is known to be fairly stable and relatively free of dust, moisture, and light pollution from cities. In the continental United States, these sites tend to be in the desert Southwest. The U.S. National Observatory for optical astronomy in the Northern Hemisphere, completed in 1973, is located high on Kitt Peak near Tucson, Arizona.

That site was chosen because of its many dry, clear nights. Seeing of 1" from such a location is regarded as good, and seeing of a few arc seconds is tolerable for many purposes. Even better conditions are found on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, and at Cerro Tololo and La Silla in the Andes Mountains of Chile (image)—which is why many large telescopes have recently been constructed at those two exceptionally clear locations.

Without atmospheric blurring, extremely fine resolution— close to the diffraction limit—can be achieved, subject only to the engineering restrictions of building or placing large structures in space. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) was launched into Earth orbit by NASA's space shuttle Discovery in 1990.

2.4-m mirror, with a diffraction limit of only 0.05", giving astronomers a view of the universe as much as 20 times sharper than that normally available from even much larger ground- based instruments.

It is becoming rare for photographic equipment to be used as the primary means of data acquisition at large observatories. Instead, electronic detectors known as charge-coupled devices, or CCDs, are in widespread use. Their output goes directly to a computer

hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of tiny light-sensitive cells, or pixels, usually arranged in a square array. Light striking a pixel causes an electrical charge to build up on it. By electronically reading out the charge on each pixel, a computer can reconstruct the pattern of light—the image— falling on the chip.