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Optics and Telescopes Lecture 11
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Why do we use telescopes? Human eyes are lenses! Human eyes are lenses! Using larger lenses… Using larger lenses… collect more light magnification
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Larger lens can make brighter and magnified images.
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Change in direction of travel
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Refraction light travels at the fastest speed (e.g., speed of light) in vacuum.
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Refraction of light by lens
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Parallel light rays from distant objects If a lens is located very far from the light source, only a few of the light rays are entering the lens. If a lens is located very far from the light source, only a few of the light rays are entering the lens. These rays are essentially parallel. These rays are essentially parallel.
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Extended object Extended image A lens creates an extended image of an extended object. each point on an extended object passes through a lens and produces an image of that point. collection of point images = image of an extended object.
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Refractive Telescope Objective lens (light-gathering) + eyepiece (making image) Light-gathering power = area of the objective lens magnification = focal length of objective lens focal length of eyepiece lens
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Refractive Telescope
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Disadvantages of refractive telescope 1.Hard to make defect free lenses (especially larger one) 2.Glass is opaque to certain wavelengths (UV is 100% blocked!) 3.Very difficult to make larger lens 4.Large lenses are heavy gravitational distortion
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Law of Reflection incidence angle = reflection angle Mirror Perpendicular to mirror surface Reflected light ray Incident light ray i r Angle of reflection r equals angle of incidence i
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Reflection : Mirror acts as a lens
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Newtonian Telescope
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Different designs of Reflecting telescopes Prime focus is good but inconvenient. Prime focus is good but inconvenient.
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All Modern telescopes are Reflecting telescopes Gemini Telescope (8m) (1)Primary mirror (2)secondary mirror (3)Cassegrain focus Large mirrors (nearly defect free : error is less than 8.5 nanometers) are much easier to make. Hollowed mirror base (honeycomb)
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Secondary mirror making a hole in the image? Secondary mirror (or Cassegrain focus hole) does not make a hole in the focused image. However, support structure creates a diffraction spike from a point source.
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Different parts of a spherically concave mirror reflect light to slightly different points image bluring A solution -parabolic mirror (harder to make) -correcting lens Spherical Aberration
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Angular resolution Because of diffraction of light (light waves spread out from a point), there is a limit in angular resolution Diffraction-limited angular resolution θ = angular resolution in arcseconds λ = wavelength of light, in meters D = diameter of telescope, in meters (example) Keck telescope, red light. …
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Hawaii, Mauna Kea
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Light Pollution
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Effect of Earth Atmosphere Light = wave Light = wave Perfect waveform got deformed due to turbulence in atmosphere… Perfect waveform got deformed due to turbulence in atmosphere… breezeturbulence in atmosphere
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Adaptive Optics Using a nearby star (e.g., point source), reshape the mirror so that it can become a perfect (diffraction limited) point source. Active Optics wind shakes tip/tilt correction
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Eliminate the effect of Atmosphere (Adaptive Optics)
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Power of Adaptive Optics
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Laser-guided Adaptive Optics
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In summary… Important Concepts Refractive telescope disadvantages Reflective telescope various designs Angular resolution Active Optics Adaptive Optics Important Terms Refraction/reflection Focal length light-gathering power light pollution Aberration (chromatic, spherical) Chapter/sections covered in this lecture : sections 6-1 through 6-3
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