08
Oct
2007
Posted by marko as Astronomy Basics
Let’s talk about the two types of telescopes, namely refractors and reflectors. According to Wikipedia, “a telescope is an instrument designed for the observation of remote objects and the collection of electromagnetic radiation“. In fact this means that the purpose of telescopes is to gather light. The bigger the surface area of the lens of the telescope, the more photons the telescope gathers. The reason for building massive telescopes is to gather more and more photons, which means to be able to see further.
The name “telescope” was invented by Galileo Galilei in 1611. In Greek “tele” = far, “scopein” = to look or see, “teleskopos” = far-seeing [Wikipedia]. The name “telescopes” actually covers more devices than just optical reflectors and refractors. Optical telescopes, radio telescopes, and X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes all belong under the name “telescopes”. In this post I concentrate in optical telescopes, and especially in reflectors and refractors.
A rafracting telescope uses a lens to gather photons and it works pretty much like a lens camera. Refraractors were the first telescopes invented. The first real refractors did exist in the beginning of 1600 in the
Photo borrowed from Alibaba.com.
Share This
2 Responses
Basics For Beginners - Telescopes (Part IV) | homeboyastronomy
October 18th, 2007 at 11:57 pm
1[…] Telescopes (Part IV) So far in this series I have discussed about the basics of telescopes. The second post of this series pointed out the differences between reflectors and refractors. I came across with […]
carl
May 10th, 2008 at 11:41 pm
2i love ya call me!! heart yA
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply
previous post: Basics For Beginners - Telescopes, Part I
next post: Astronomy Picture Of The Day - Stunning Aurora Borealis In Alaska
to top of page...