- radio teloscope



Telescope
 

 

telescope
University of Texas Astronomers Achieve Major Improvement in Cosmic Distance Scale with Hubble Space Telescope 
SpaceRef - Apr 08 11:32 AM
AUSTIN, Texas -- An international team of astronomers led by Fritz Benedict and Barbara McArthur of The University of Texas at Austin has used Hubble Space Telescope to solve one of the biggest problems in measuring the universe's expansion.

temperature
Ciba Specialty Chemicals And FreshPoint Present Time-Temperature Indicators At Emballage Trade Fair 
ChemicalOnline - Oct 27 6:33 AM
Ciba Specialty Chemicals and FreshPoint are presenting OnVu, the revolutionary new time-temperature indicator (TTI) system that shows at a glance the freshness of perishable goods, at Stand B 069 in Hall 4 at the Emballage trade fair in Paris from November 20-24, 2006

temptation
Resist temptation to pick out books and shoes for kids 
Deseret Morning News - Mar 11 11:18 PM
Today I want to tell you how NOT to select books for children. But first I want to tell you about the shoes I wore to the Junior Prom in 1974.

tennessee
Basketball: Rutgers and Tennessee reach women's NCAA final 
International Herald Tribune - 1 hour, 35 minutes ago
Tennessee and Rutgers reached Tuesday's women's NCAA final by playing scrappy defense in the semifinals. Tennessee needed a 20-2 run over the last eight minutes to beat North Carolina, 56-50, Sunday. Rutgers beat up on LSU, 59-35.

tennis elbow
Central tops undermanned Springstead, 6-1 
Hernando Today - Mar 15 8:00 PM
By CHRIS BERNHARDT JR. cbernhardt@hernandotoday.com Published: Mar 16, 2007 SPRING HILL Tony Bulso showed up at the tennis courts at Delta Woods Park last Thursday afternoon, ready to hit some balls over the net.

tequila
From Wine to Tequila 
Hollister Free Lance - Mar 07 9:53 AM
Hollister - If Frank Leal has his way, San Benito County won't only be famous for wine, but also for tequila. Last week, Leal, who owns Leal Vineyards in Hollister, received 16,000 blue agaves, a plant cultivated in Mexico, to produce tequila.

teresa may
Ellis would forgive shooter, husband says 
Deseret Morning News - Feb 16 11:24 PM
Although Teresa Ellis' love of confections may have earned her the nickname "Sweets," it stuck because of her kind, loving personality.

teri harrison
On Campus News 
Opelousas Daily World - Mar 07 12:49 AM
Congratulations to the Girls 2007 LHSAA Class 1A State Champion basketball team. Championship T-shirts orders are not being taken. Forms will be sent home with your child.

teri hatcher
Teri Hatcher's Weekend Summit with Former President Bush 
Extra TV - Mar 05 4:22 PM
Teri Hatcher and Former President George H. W. Bush are quite the odd couple, but Extra knows their connection.

terminator
Israelis produce miniature Terminator 
Addict 3D - Mar 08 12:20 PM
Pint sized robo-assassin talks the talk, can't walk the walkIsraeli killer-robot maker Elbit Systems today unveiled the "Viper," a small ground-crawling combat machine "roughly the size of a small television".

terri runnels
THE WRESTLING MENU #220 
Lords of Pain - Feb 27 9:08 PM
Welcome one and all to the 220th edition of The Wrestling Menu, the column that is sure to satisfy your taste buds when it comes to discussing all things wrestling.

terrorism
Anti-terrorism standards aim to stay step ahead 
Stars and Stripes - Mar 11 2:12 PM
MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan Defense Department installations across the Pacific are to adopt new anti-terrorism standards issued last fall that require more planning and testing of security systems and expands protection from various types of attacks.

testicles
'Chasing Life' chapter 1: 'Beginning the chase' 
CNN.com - Mar 26 2:02 PM
As I started to talk about my modern-day quest for immortality with colleagues and contacts I had developed over the years, I heard murmurs about a group of Russians who were convinced they had stumbled on the fountain of youth. More specifically, they were confident they had developed ways to achieve a sort of practical immortality. In fact, the word echoing through the longevity chambers was ...

text messaging
NetSpend Enhances Anytime Alerts With Text Messaging 
[Press Release] PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance - Apr 03 12:34 PM
NetSpend, the nation's leading provider and marketer of prepaid debit cards, has announced an enhancement of its complimentary Anytime Alerts account information service with the addition of two-way mobile phone text messaging.

the beatles
U.S. band to perform "Beatles album" that never was 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Mar 10 6:25 AM
A group of New York musicians is planning to do what the Beatles never did -- perform the songs the Fab Four might have recorded as their final album had they stayed together just a little longer.

the nightmare before christmas
Tragedy connects man with community 
Daily Press - Jan 28 8:26 AM
VICTORVILLE John Alkana woke up one morning to a fathers nightmare. A couple of weeks before Christmas, the Victorville real estate agent was roused from bed at 3 a.m. by his daughter-in-law, who said her husband, Shane, had suffered a stroke and was in the hospital.

the simpsons
Simpsons' Spanish voices angry with film 
KATU Portland - 1 hour, 35 minutes ago
Mexican voice-over actors who have dubbed ''The Simpsons'' TV series into Spanish for 15 years are threatening to boycott the cartoon's upcoming movie if they are not hired to dub it.

the sims
Sims: 'We didn't play our best' 
Macomb Daily - 1 hour, 57 minutes ago
CHICAGO -- With their season, their tenure ticking down to its final few seconds, Michigan seniors Dion Harris, Courtney Sims, Lester Abram and Brent Petway sat side-by-side on the bench sharing a look of despair.

the suite life of zack and cody
Simmer Down, Little Dogey, While I Try to Dig My Heels in the Dirt 
RedNova - Mar 05 10:49 AM
By RITA SHERROW World Television Editor Disney is offering up four new episodes of its comedies "That's So Raven,""The Suite Life of Zack & Cody,""Hannah Montana" and "Corey in the House" starting at 6 p.m. Friday on cable channel 32.

the wiggles
Wiggles sing and dance into kids' hearts 
Orange County Register - Mar 11 1:52 PM
The Wiggles continue to dazzle their little fans despite a change in the group's line-up.

thomas edison
Edison to speak 
Iola Register - Mar 12 1:47 PM
Fred Krebs will portray Thomas Edison at a History Alive program at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Iola Public Library. The event is being sponsored by Friends of the Library.

thomas jefferson
Maine man announcing for president -- as Thomas Jefferson 
Boston Globe - 1 hour, 19 minutes ago
A longtime art teacher who now describes himself as a "professional futurist and social architect" planned to celebrate his 70th birthday Friday by announcing his write-in candidacy for president while impersonating Thomas Jefferson.

thomas the tank
Climb on board: Thomas rides into town 
York Daily Record - 2 hours, 14 minutes ago
Mar 8, 2007 Designers and technicians at the Pullo Family Performing Arts Center have transformed the stage into the Island of Sodor - home to Thomas the Tank Engine and his friends Percy and Diesel.

thoracotomy

three 6 mafia
THREE 6 MAFIA ADVENTURES COMING TO MTV: Duo find out if its hard out here for a pimp 
Eurweb - Mar 14 1:02 AM
*Its kind of like the TV show The Beverly Hillbillies meets Rap City. Rap duo Three 6 Mafia, who won an Academy Award for their track Its Hard Out Here for a Pimp is coming to television with their very own comedic reality series on MTV.


three days grace
Three Days Grace To Tour with Breaking Benjamin and Puddle of Crudd 
antiMUSIC - Apr 02 3:57 PM
antiMusic works on a free link policy for reprinting of our original articles, click here for details. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use.

thyroid
Sports wire 
The Columbus Dispatch - 1 hour, 34 minutes ago
Boise State basketball player Coby Karl, the son of Denver Nuggets coach George Karl, will undergo surgery to treat cancer in April. Karl will have cancerous lymph nodes removed April 2. It will be the second cancer surgery in 13 months for Karl, who had his thyroid removed last March.

thyroid disease
Health news 
Detroit News - Mar 26 11:13 PM
H ead and neck cancer can occur in the mouth, throat, larynx (voice box), swallowing passages, salivary glands, thyroid gland and nasal passages. People who use tobacco or drink alcohol heavily are at higher risk than others of developing the disease. Most cases are found in people older than 40, and the disease is more common in African Americans than Caucasians, says Henry Ford Health System. ...

thyroid gland
Renegade parathyroid gland raises blood calcium levels 
The Standard-Times - 15 minutes ago
DEAR DR. DONOHUE: I am a female and 85 years old. I was diagnosed with osteoporosis seven years ago, and started taking Fosamax, Citracal and vitamin D.

tia carrere
"THE O.C." SERIES FACT SHEET 
FOX 61 Chattanooga - Feb 16 11:18 AM
Welcome to THE O.C., the story of a group of friends and families whose lives have forever been changed by the arrival of an outsider Ryan Atwood to their ocean-side community of Newport Beach, Orange County, CA.

tick removal
MinuteClinic Continues to Expand in Las Vegas; Adds New Health Care Center at CVS/Pharmacy Store on The Strip 
RedNova - Mar 14 1:15 PM
LAS VEGAS, March 14 /PRNewswire/ -- MinuteClinic, the pioneer and largest provider of retail-based health care in the United States, has opened a new health care center at the CVS/pharmacy store on The Strip (3758 Las Vegas Boulevard South).

ticketmaster
Ticketmaster ups presence in direct-to-fan arena 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Mar 26 1:24 AM
Ticketmaster's purchase of a majority stake in echomusic, a Nashville-based Web entertainment marketing company, gives the ticketing giant an important new presence in the critical direct-to-fan space.

tickets
Obama pays parking tickets 17 years late 
AP via Yahoo! News - Mar 08 6:27 PM
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama got more than an education when he attended Harvard Law School in the late 1980s. He also got a healthy stack of parking tickets, most of which he never paid.

tickle test
Reward Offered In Tickle Creek Area Burglaries 
Fox 12 Oregon - Mar 02 8:43 AM
Police are offering a reward for information on a recent rash of burglaries in the Tickle Creek area. Police said thieves have targeted the small community over the last few months.

tickling
2005 Nissan Sentra Spec V from North America - Comments 
Carsurvey.org - Mar 10 1:37 AM
First of all if you are thinking of buying a Nissan, please keep in mind that you will need a lot of patience with the service department. The first problem I experienced with the car is the brakes. The brakes were making very loud noises right after I bought the car.

tie dye
Coach's new purse line makes play for high end 
Chicago Tribune - Feb 19 3:32 AM
Confident in its customer research and product quality, Coach moves toward designer level with Legacy bags A tangerine tie-dye clutch with a rhinestone closure. A snow-white ski hobo bag with fur trim. A royal blue python satchel.

tifa lockheart
3d anime sex teen 3d. 
El Cronista Regional - Jun 21 2:41 AM
Adult toon to teens getting pussy to sexy anime images by nano entity. Digimon porn mangas for free blowjob sites for 3d xxx mom. Free erotic hentai comics and the whipping robert hayden and hentai hardcore lesbians. 3d erotic cartoons or big breasted women nude or cum facial anime.

tiffany taylor
First-year teacher goes into the field 
Morganton News Herald - 2 hours, 25 minutes ago
Anna Moose, left, a teacher at Burke Middle College, gives a combined English and U.S. history lesson to her students Tiffany Xiong, front row left, Rebekah Thao, front row right, Wednesday at Western Piedmont Community College.

tiffany towers
War Protesters Want Troops Home, Want Peace 
The Morning News - Mar 14 1:37 AM
FAYETTEVILLE -- The song "Peace Train" quickly was drowned out Sunday by hundreds of marchers who came to the Fayetteville square chanting, "1, 2, 3, 4, we don't want your oil war."

tigger
Rugby: England confounds expectation and befuddles France, 26-18 
International Herald Tribune - Mar 11 6:12 AM
The victory turned the Six Nations tournament from a regal French procession into a desperate three-horse race. England is suddenly one of those horses, albeit a dark one.

tila nguyen
The 50 Most Important People on the Web 
PC World via Yahoo! News - Mar 05 1:00 AM
Here's who's shaping what you read, watch, hear, write, buy, sell, befriend, flame, and otherwise do online.

tim mcgraw
Tim McGraw To View And CBS Early Show 
Net Music Countdown - Mar 18 11:25 PM
NASHVILLE, TN Monday Mar.19.2007 /netmusiccountdown.com/ -- Tim McGraw was in New York City this week for a performance on Good Morning America.

time warner road runner
Time Warner Cable and Sprint Launch Mobile Access Wireless Service in Cincinnati-Dayton Region 
[Press Release] Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance - Mar 06 8:14 AM
CINNCINATI----Time Warner Cable and Sprint today announced the launch of Mobile Access in the Cincinnati-Dayton Region. Mobile Access integrates Time Warner Cable's Digital Telephone, Digital Cable, and Road Runner products with Sprint's wireless service to bring mobility and convergence to customers.

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Telescope
For other senses of this word, see Telescope (disambiguation).
50 cm refracting telescope at Nice Observatory.

The word "telescope" (from the Greek tele = 'far' and skopein = 'to look or see'; teleskopos = 'far-seeing') usually refers to optical telescopes, but there are telescopes for most of the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation and for other signal types.

An optical telescope is an optical tool that gathers and focuses electromagnetic radiation. Telescopes increase the apparent angular size of distant objects, as well as their apparent brightness. Telescopes work by employing one or more curved optical elements - lenses or mirrors - to gather light or other electromagnetic radiation and bring that light or radiation to a focus, where the image can be observed, photographed or studied.

Optical telescopes are used for astronomy and in many non-astronomical instruments including theodolites, transits, spotting scopes, monoculars, binoculars, camera lenses and spyglasses.

Single-dish Radio telescopes are focusing radio antennae often having a parabolic shape. The dishes are sometimes constructed of a conductive wire mesh whose openings are smaller than a wavelength. Multi-element Radio telescopes are constructed from pairs or larger groups of these dishes to synthesize large "virtual" apertures that are similar in size to the separation between the telescopes: see aperture synthesis. As of 2005, the current record array size is many times the width of the Earth, utilizing space-based Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) telescopes such as the Japanese HALCA (Highly Advanced Laboratory for Communications and Astronomy) VSOP (VLBI Space Observatory Program) satellite. Aperture synthesis is now also being applied to optical telescopes using optical interferometers (arrays of optical telescopes) and Aperture Masking Interferometry at single telescopes.

X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes have a problem because these rays go through most metals and glasses. They use ring-shaped "glancing" mirrors, made of heavy metals, that reflect the rays just a few degrees. The mirrors are usually a section of a rotated parabola. High energy particle telescopes detect a flux of particles, usually originating at an astronomical source.

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Types
  • 3 Research telescopes
  • 4 Imperfect images
    • 4.1 The five Seidel aberrations
    • 4.2 The chromatic aberrations
  • 5 Famous optical telescopes
  • 6 Other famous telescopes
  • 7 See also
  • 8 External links

History

Main article: History of telescopes

The first telescopes may have been Assyrian crystal lenses[1], but the Visby lenses tentatively suggest that the technology was known to the Arabs and Persians. Leonard Digges is sometimes credited with the invention in England in the 1570s, but usually credit for assembling the first telescope is given to an unknown Dutch spectacle maker in about 1608. Some name that person as Hans Lippershey (c. 1570 – c. 1619), but Jacob Metius and Zacharias Jansen also claimed to have invented a telescope during the same period. Even if Lippershey did not make the first one, he publicized it. Galileo Galilei made his own telescope in 1609, calling it at first a "perspicillum," and then using the terms "telescopium" in Latin and "telescopio" in Italian (from which the English word derives). Galileo is generally credited with being the first to use a telescope for astronomical purposes. Galileo's telescope consisted of a convex object lens and a concave eye lens, which is universally called a Galilean telescope (used as a viewfinder in many simple cameras). Later, Johannes Kepler described the optics of lenses (see his books Astronomiae Pars Optica and Dioptrice), including a new kind of astronomical telescope with two convex lenses (a principle often called the Kepler telescope). Optical interferometer arrays and arrays of radio telescopes were developed much more recently. Telescopes have been around for a while.

Types

Main article: List of telescope types

Telescopes are broadly classified into two main types.

  1. Optical telescopes
  2. Radio telescopes

Optical telescopes are also divided into three types.

  1. Galilean refracting telescopes (also known as dioptrics)
  2. Newtonian reflecting telescopes (also known as catoptrics)
  3. Catadioptrics (i.e. Schmidt-Cassegrain, and Maksutov-Cassegrain)

Galilean or refracting telescopes employ the refractive properties of light, and are constructed of lenses. These can be used for both terrestrial and astronomical viewing.

Newtonian or reflecting telescopes employ the reflective properties of light, using a concave paraboic primary mirror to collect and focus incoming light onto a flat secondary (diagonal) mirror that in turn reflects the image ot of an opening at the side of the main tube and into the eyepiece.

Catadioptrics (generally referred to as Cassegrains) use a combination of mirrors and lenses to fold the optics and form an image.


Research telescopes

Harlan J. Smith Telescope at McDonald Observatory, TX

Most large research telescopes can operate as either a Cassegrain telescope (longer focal length, and a narrower field with higher magnification) or a Newtonian telescope (brighter field). They have a pierced primary mirror, a Newtonian focus, and a spider to mount a variety of replaceable secondary mirrors.

A new era of telescope making was inaugurated by the Multiple Mirror Telescope (MMT), with a mirror composed of six segments synthesizing a mirror of 4.5 meters diameter. This has now been replaced by a single 6.5m mirror. Its example was followed by the Keck telescopes with 10 m segmented mirrors.

The largest current ground-based telescopes have primary mirrors of between 6 and 11 meters in diameter. In this generation of telescopes, the mirror is usually very thin, and is kept in an optimal shape by an array of actuators (see active optics). This technology has driven new designs for future telescopes with diameters of 30, 50 and even 100 meters.

Relatively cheap, mass-produced ~2 meter telescopes have recently been developed and have made a significant impact on astronomy research. These allow many astronomical targets to be monitored continuously, and for large areas of sky to be surveyed. Many are robotic telescopes, computer controlled over the internet (see e.g. the Liverpool Telescope and the Faulkes Telescope North and South), allowing automated follow-up of astronomical events.

Initially the detector used in telescopes was the human eye. Later, the sensitized photographic plate took its place, and the spectrograph was introduced, allowing the gathering of spectral information. After the photographic plate, successive generations of electronic detectors, such as the charge-coupled device (CCDs), have been perfected, each with more sensitivity and resolution, and often with a wider wavelength coverage.

Current research telescopes have several instruments to choose from such as:

  • imagers, of different spectral responses
  • spectrographs, useful in different regions of the spectrum
  • polarimeters, that detect light polarization.

In recent years, some technologies to overcome the distortions caused by atmosphere on ground-based telescopes were developed, with good results. See adaptive optics, speckle imaging and optical interferometry.

The phenomenon of optical diffraction sets a limit to the resolution and image quality that a telescope can achieve, which is the effective area of the Airy disc, which limits how close two such discs can be placed. This absolute limit is called the diffraction limit (or sometimes the Rayleigh criterion, Dawes limit or Sparrow's resolution limit). This limit depends on the wavelength of the studied light (so that the limit for red light comes much earlier than the limit for blue light) and on the diameter of the telescope mirror. This means that a telescope with a certain mirror diameter can resolve up to a certain limit at a certain wavelength. If greater resolution is needed at that wavelength, a wider mirror has to be built or aperture synthesis performed using an array of nearby telescopes.

Imperfect images

No telescope can form a perfect image. Even if a reflecting telescope could have a perfect mirror, or a refracting telescope could have a perfect lens, the effects of aperture diffraction could still not be escaped. In reality, perfect mirrors and perfect lenses do not exist, so image aberrations in addition to aperture diffraction must be taken into account. Image aberrations can be broken down into two main classes, monochromatic, and polychromatic. In 1857, Philipp Ludwig von Seidel (1821-1896) decomposed the first order monochromatic aberrations into five constituent aberrations. They are now commonly referred to as the five Seidel Aberrations.

The five Seidel aberrations

Spherical aberration 
The difference in focal length between paraxial rays and marginal rays, proportional to the square of the aperture.
Coma 
A most objectionable defect by which points are imaged as comet-like asymmetrical patches of light with tails, which makes measurement very imprecise. Its magnitude is usually deduced from the optical sine theorem.
Astigmatism 
The image of a point forms focal lines at the sagittal and tangiental foci and in between (in the absence of coma) an elliptical shape.
Curvature of Field 
The Petzval curvature means that the image instead of lying in a plane actually lies on a curved surface which is described as hollow or round. This causes problems when a flat imaging device is used e.g. a photographic plate or CCD image sensor.
Distortion 
Either barrel or pincushion, a radial distortion which must be corrected for if multiple images are to be combined (similar to stitching multiple photos into a panoramic photo).

They are always listed in the above order since this expresses their interdependence as first order aberrations via moves of the exit/entrance pupils. The first Seidel aberration, Spherical Aberration is independent of the position of the exit pupil (as it is the same for axial and extra-axial pencils). The second, coma is changes as a function of pupil distance and spherical aberration, hence the well known result that it is impossible to correct the coma in a lens free of spherical aberration by simply moving the pupil. Similar dependencies affect the remaining aberrations in the list.

The chromatic aberrations

Longitudinal Chromatic Aberration 
As with spherical aberration this is the same for axial and oblique pencils.
Transverse Chromatic Aberration (Chromatic Aberration of Magnification)

Famous optical telescopes

The Hubble Space Telescope orbits above Earth.
  • The Hubble Space Telescope is in orbit beyond Earth's atmosphere to allow for observations not distorted by astronomical seeing. In this way the images can be diffraction limited, and used for coverage in the ultraviolet (UV) and infrared.
  • The Keck telescopes are currently (as of 2005) the largest, but will soon be superseded by the Gran Telescopio Canarias and Southern African Large Telescope.
  • The Very Large Telescope array (VLT) is currently (as of 2002) the record holder for total collecting area in an array of telescopes, with four telescopes each 8 meters in diameter. The four telescopes, belonging to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) and located in the Atacama desert in Chile, are usually operated independently for faint astronomical observations, but up to three telescopes can be operated together for aperture synthesis observations of bright objects.
  • The Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer is the optical telescope (array) that can currently (as of 2005) produce the highest resolution images at visible wavelengths.
  • The CHARA (Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy) array is the telescope array that can currently (as of 2005) produce the highest resolution images at near-infrared wavelengths.
  • There are many plans for even larger telescopes. One of them is the Overwhelmingly Large Telescope (OWL), which is intended to have a single aperture of 100 meters in diameter.
  • The 200-inch (5.08-meter) Hale telescope on Palomar Mountain was the largest conventional research telescope for many years. It has a single borosilicate (Pyrex™) mirror that was famously difficult to construct. The mounting is a special design of equatorial mount called a yoke mount, which permits the telescope to be pointed at and near the north celestial pole.
  • The 100-inch (2.54-meter) Hooker Telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory was used by Edwin Hubble to discover galaxies and the redshift. The mirror was made of green glass by Saint-Gobain. In 1919, the telescope was used for the first stellar diameter measurements using interferometry. The telescope now has an adaptive optics system, and is still useful for advanced research.
  • The 72-inch Leviathan at Birr Castle (in Ireland) was the largest telescope in the world from 1845 until it was dismanlted in 1908. It was not succeeded in size until the constuction of the Hooker Telescope.
  • The 1.02-meter Yerkes Telescope (in Wisconsin) is the largest aimable refracting telescope in use.
  • The 0.76-meter Nice refractor (in France) that became operational in 1888 was at that time the world's largest refractor. This was the last time the most powerful operational telescope in the world was located in Europe. It was exceeded in size one year later by the 0.91-meter refractor at the Lick Observatory.
  • The largest refractor ever constructed was French. It was on display at the 1900 Paris Exposition. Its lens was stationary, prefigured so as to sag into the correct shape. The telescope was aimed by the aid of a Foucault sidérostat, which is a movable plane mirror with a 2-meter diameter, mounted in a large cast-iron frame. The horizontal tube was 60 m long and the objective had 1.25 m in diameter. It was a failure.
  • The 1-meter refracting Swedish Solar Telescope (SST) on La Palma, is currently the highest-resolution solar telescope in the world.

Other famous telescopes

  • Arecibo Observatory
  • Atacama Large Millimeter Array
  • Very Large Array
  • Chandra X-ray Observatory
  • XMM-Newton
  • LIGO
  • IceCube Neutrino Detector
  • Isaac Newton Telescope
  • William Herschel Telescope

See also

  • Amateur telescope making
  • Aperture synthesis
  • ASCOM open standards for computer control of telescopes
  • Depth of field
  • Dynameter
  • Eyepiece
  • First light
  • F-number
  • History of telescopes
  • Maksutov telescope
  • Microscope
  • Optical telescope
  • Radio telescope
  • Reflector telescope
  • Refracting telescope
  • Robotic telescope
  • Timeline of telescopes, observatories, and observing technology

External links

  • ESO 100-m telescope
  • How to choose right Telescope
  • Dobsonian Telescopes Big Scopes <1m
  • The Resolution of a Telescope
  • Southern African Large Telescope (SALT)
  • UK Telescopes
  • The Digges telescope of the 1570s
  • The Swedish Solar telescope
  • Meade Instructional Telescope Videos
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telescope"

University of Texas Astronomers Achieve Major Improvement in Cosmic Distance Scale with Hubble Space Telescope 

SpaceRef - Apr 08 11:32 AM
AUSTIN, Texas -- An international team of astronomers led by Fritz Benedict and Barbara McArthur of The University of Texas at Austin has used Hubble Space Telescope to solve one of the biggest problems in measuring the universe's expansion.
NASA Hubble Space Telescope Daily Report #4335 
SpaceRef - Apr 08 1:32 PM
Notice: For the foreseeable future, the daily reports may contain apparent discrepancies between some proposal descriptions and the listed instrument usage.

Some of night sky's myriad galaxies visible with help from telescope 
Florence Morning News - Apr 08 5:01 PM
It can be difficult to comprehend the fact that well beyond the many stars that dot the night sky is a myriad of galaxies, many of which extend beyond our visual grasp.

"Curiouser & Curiouser": Global Beat April 2007 
All About Jazz - 2 hours, 11 minutes ago
Curiouser and curiouser! cried Alice (she was so much surprised, that for the moment she quite forgot how to speak good English). Now Im opening out like the largest telescope that ever was!

Invite a reporter to your hobby group 
The Times-News - 2 hours, 37 minutes ago
Times-News features writer Ariel Hansen is new to Magic Valley, and she's looking for a hobby. Specifically, a hobby that draws its aficionados together - for quilting sessions, nighttime telescope parties or radio-controlled aircraft fly-ins, for example.

Mexico takes pride in giant radio telescope 
Detroit Free Press - Apr 05 12:34 AM
SIERRA NEGRA, Mexico -- It looms over Mexico from a mountain so high it's hard to breathe, a massive white radio telescope of monumental proportions. Its dish is half the width of a football field, stands as high as a 20-story building and watches the sky from a mountain taller than any peak in the contiguous United States.

NASA Telescope Finds Planets Thrive Around Stellar Twins 
Science Daily - Apr 04 3:02 PM
The double sunset that Luke Skywalker gazed upon in the film "Star Wars" might not be a fantasy. Astronomers using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope have observed that planetary systems -- dusty disks of asteroids, comets and possibly planets -- are at least as abundant in twin-star systems as they are in those, like our own, with only one star.

Supernova Imposter Goes Supernova 
SpaceRef - Apr 08 2:32 PM
In a galaxy far, far away, a massive star suffered a nasty double whammy. On Oct. 20, 2004, Japanese amateur astronomer Koichi Itagaki saw the star let loose an outburst so bright that it was initially mistaken for a supernova. The star survived, but for only two years.

Massive star burps, then explodes 
SpaceRef - Apr 08 2:32 PM
On Oct. 20, 2004, Japanese amateur astronomer Koichi Itagaki saw the star let loose an outburst so bright that it was initially mistaken for a supernova. The star survived, but for only two years.

Back Talk 
Trentonian - 1 hour, 17 minutes ago
Park state cars

Last Update: 2007-04-09 01:28:53
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