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Add to table of contents: Pictures of telescopesPg. 82 TelescopesPg. 83
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Telescopes 1. Optical – detects visible light. A. Refracting (objective is a lens) - needs lots of light to work - good for viewing the moon and “close” planets.
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Refractors (glass lens)
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Types of telescopes B. Reflecting (objective is a mirror) - best for seeing objects in space that don’t emit very much light. - almost all major telescopes are reflecting ones.
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Reflectors (mirror)
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Hubble Telescope Launched by Space Shuttle Discovery, 1990 Reflector telescope that observes in the near ultraviolet, visible, and near infrared spectra. The telescope is named after astronomer Edwin Hubble.
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2. Radio telescope – detects long wavelength radio waves. -Focuses radio waves on an antenna then converted to pictures.
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Types of telescopes 3. X-ray and gamma ray – detects short wavelength waves. X-ray telescopes help astronomers study the sun, supernova, and other stars. Gamma ray telescopes study supernovas, pulsars and black holes.
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Chandra X-ray Telescope - Launched by Space Shuttle Columbia in 1999 This is a model! Real one is over 10,000lbs! Predicted to last 5 years, but it is still working today! Tycho Supernova seen in x-ray light
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Compton Gamma Ray Telescope Launched by Space Shuttle Atlantis 1991 o June 4, 2000 it ended its mission. It was too big too completely burn up upon re- entry into Earth’s atmosphere so NASA controlled the re-entry before it fell by itself and directed the re-entry so it would fall into the ocean. o 1 st to detect gamma rays bursts from space lasting from a fraction of a second to many minutes. There is no clear scientific consensus as to their cause.
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** All telescopes work best outside Earth’s atmosphere because it distorts light and radiation! Why else?
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