Encyclopedia > Reflector telescope

  Article Content

Reflector telescope

A reflector telescope is a telescope, with which the substantial part of the optics consists of reflecting elements. Optical telescopes[?] use highly exact polished concave mirrors as primary mirrors. The shape of the mirrors can be spherical, parabolic or hyperbolic[?]. The surface must be worked on with an accuracy from 100 to 20nm. Mirror sizes to 8.6m were realized.

Nearly all large research-grade astronomical telescopes are reflectors. This is due to several reasons:

  • In a lens the entire volume of material has to be free of imperfection and inhomogeneities, whereas in a mirror, only one surface has to be perfectly polished.
  • Light of different colors travels through a medium other than vacuum at different speeds. This causes chromatic aberration.
  • There are technical difficulties involved in manufacturing and manipulating large-aperture lenses. One of them is that a lense can only be held by its perimeter. A mirror, on the other hand, can be supported by the whole side opposite to its reflecting face.

In radio telescopes metal surfaces, which collect the radio waves in the actual antenna, work as mirrors. These are used as parabolic reflectors. The largest single piece antenna is the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico.

According to their geometry one differentiates different kinds of reflector telescopes:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
1904

... jet pioneer November 30 - Clyfford Still, painter Deaths: January 20 - Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev, Russian chemist and inventor of the Periodic table May 19 - ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 26.5 ms