1 / 21

Astronomy 121 Lecture 5

Astronomy 121 Lecture 5. Today: Telescope basics Optical astronomy [ Ch 6.2 ]. Telescopes. Why use telescopes? To see better detail. To see fainter objects. To see other wavelengths. Two basic telescope designs: Refracting Reflecting. Refracting. Basic telescope type #1

dyani
Download Presentation

Astronomy 121 Lecture 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Astronomy 121Lecture 5 Today: Telescope basics Optical astronomy [ Ch 6.2 ] Astr121 Lecture 5

  2. Telescopes Why use telescopes? • To see better detail. • To see fainter objects. • To see other wavelengths. Two basic telescope designs: • Refracting • Reflecting Astr121 Lecture 5

  3. Refracting Basic telescope type #1 Use lenses to create the image. Refract = To bend the light as it passes through some material. (glass, plastic) Astr121 Lecture 5

  4. Reflecting Basic telescope type #2. Use curved mirrors to create the image. Reflect = To bounce the light off the surface of some material. (glass, metal) Astr121 Lecture 5

  5. Reflecting vs. Refracting Problems with refracting telescopes: #1: Chromatic aberration: Lens acts like a prism  Different colors are focused differently: Astr121 Lecture 5

  6. Reflecting vs. Refracting Problem #2: Weight: Large lenses: Very heavy. Supported on the edges. Large mirrors: Can be thin. Supported on the back. Largest refracting (lens) telescope: Yerkes 1 meter  Astr121 Lecture 5

  7. Reflecting vs. Refracting Problem #3: Manufacturing: Thin lenses = very long focal lengths.  Problems designing and using such long telescopes. Thick lenses = short focal lengths.  Lots of glass: must be free of defects, will be heavy. Astr121 Lecture 5

  8. Bigger is Better Keck Telescope (actually 2 of them) Largest reflecting Visible/IR telescope: 10 meter mirror  Located on Mauna Kea, a dormant Hawaiian volcano, about 14,000 feet high. Astr121 Lecture 5

  9. Light Collection Reason #1 for big telescopes: Collect more light. The larger the opening, the more light collected. Larger opening  more light  detect fainter objects. Astr121 Lecture 5

  10. Resolving Power Reason #2 for big telescopes: Resolving power: the ability to distinguish detail. Means how closely two objects can be seen separately. Not Resolved Barely resolved Resolved Astr121 Lecture 5

  11. Angular Measurements Measuring angles: 360 degrees in a circle 1o 60 arc-minutes per degree 1’ 60 arc-seconds per arc-minute 1’’ Same angles: Or use radians: 2p radians = 360o Astr121 Lecture 5

  12. Resolution Resolution of a telescope is determined by the size of its aperture (opening). If D = opening diameter, Smallest angular separation: If l and D are in same unitsa is in arc-seconds. Larger diameter telescope = Smaller resolution Astr121 Lecture 5

  13. Resolution Examples For l = 500 nm (visible): D a Golf ball at: Astr121 Lecture 5

  14. Resolution Alcor Mizar Mizar Astr121 Lecture 5

  15. Magnification Magnification = ‘Zoom’ factor for a given image, set by eyepiece. It’s important, but it can’t overcome low resolution. • Information limited by resolution and ‘seeing’. • Magnification useful below these limits. Example: TV or newspaper picture made of tiny dots. • Dot size = resolution • Zooming in doesn’t make more detail, just bigger dots. Astr121 Lecture 5

  16. Altitude Keck telescopes at 14,000 feet  Why? • Above the weather. • Above a lot of turbulent air. • Above a lot of absorption. Astr121 Lecture 5

  17. “Seeing” Seeing: how stable and clear the atmosphere is. Turbulence in the atmosphere causes distortions: ‘Twinkling’ of stars. Left side: bad seeing. Right side: good seeing. Typical atmospheric limit is 1’’. At high altitudes you are above much of the turbulent air. Astr121 Lecture 5

  18. Atmospheric Absorption Certain wavelengths are strongly absorbed, so must get to high altitude to see them. Especially IR, UV. Astr121 Lecture 5

  19. Light Pollution Populated areas emit a lot of light, making the sky appear less dark and blocking out faint objects. Telescopes often located in remote, unpopulated areas. Astr121 Lecture 5

  20. Summary Bigger telescopes better because: • Collect more light  see fainter objects • Better resolution  see smaller detail Observing problems: • “Seeing”  air turbulence • Absorption  atmosphere opaque at some wavelengths • Light pollution  blocks faint objects Solution: telescope at high altitude, usually away from population. Astr121 Lecture 5

  21. Next Time: Telescopes at Other Wavelengths Space Astronomy [ Ch. 6.4, 6.5 ] Astr121 Lecture 5

More Related