Telescope - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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Observatory).
In some telescopes designed in the 1990s, the mirror’s weight has been dramatically reduced by sandwiching a honeycomb pattern of glass ribs between a thin, butrigid, concave mirror and a flat back plate.
Engineers have even developed meniscus mirrors—mirrors that are too thin to support their own weight.
An adjustableframework supports the meniscus mirror, and servomechanical actuators, controlled by computer, continually adjust the shape of the mirror as it tracks celestial targets.
Actuators are also critical to the operation of segmented mirror telescopes, like Keck, that require that a number of smaller mirrors operate as if they were onelarge mirror.
C Resolution
An optical telescope’s resolution—the ability to see fine detail—increases with mirror or lens size.
However, Earth’s turbulent atmosphere provides a practical limit onresolution because it blurs incoming starlight.
This effect makes stars appear to twinkle at night.
With the use of computers, astronomers are developing adaptive optics that essentially take the blur out of starlight.
Astronomers use computers to analyze theblurring created by the atmosphere and compensate for it by rapidly distorting the mirrors in a reflecting telescope.
The Keck II telescope at Hawaii’s Mauna KeaObservatory was outfitted with such technology in 1999, enabling it to take pictures that are 20 times more detailed than before.
Telescopes using adaptive optics canresolve something the size of a quarter at a distance of more than 50 kilometers (30 miles).
D Optical Interferometry
A new technique in optical astronomy is to combine signals from telescopes in separate locations so that the resulting image is equal to that received from one gianttelescope, a method called optical interferometry.
In 2001 the European Southern Observatory opened the largest optical interferometer, the Very Large Telescope(VLT), in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile.
The VLT combines the light from four 323-in (820-cm) telescopes and several smaller telescopes to produce an imageequivalent to that of a 630-in (1,600-cm) telescope.
Optical interferometers are useful for resolving the separation between relatively bright, closely paired objects, such as double stars.
Astronomers hope this techniquewill eventually make it possible to directly image small, Earth-sized planets orbiting distant stars.
E Recording Images
Throughout most of the history of astronomy, scientists have viewed celestial objects through a telescope’s eyepiece.
When photography was invented in the 1800s,one of its first applications was to attach a camera to a telescope to make a photograph of the Moon.
Photography permitted astronomers to record and archive whatthey saw.
Photographic time exposures exceeded the eye’s sensitivity and recorded very faint objects, often in rich colors.
Today, photographic film in telescopes has been largely replaced by solid-state detectors called charge-coupled devices (CCDs).
These thumbnail-sized silicon chips aredivided into millions of picture elements, called pixels, that convert incoming starlight into an electric charge that is read by computer.
The resulting mosaic of bright anddark pixels creates a picture.
CCDs provide much greater sensitivity and contrast than photographs do, and the image is automatically recorded in digital form forsubsequent storage and enhancement by computer image processing.
CCDs can also record more wavelengths of light than cameras can, from the visual edge of theultraviolet region to the near-infrared.
III RADIO TELESCOPES
Radio astronomy was discovered in 1931 when Bell Telephone Laboratories engineer Karl Jansky, using a makeshift antenna, realized that annoying radio static wasactually coming from the core of our galaxy.
This was the first time that scientists realized that radio waves could come from nonterrestrial sources.
In the years since,many major discoveries in radio astronomy have similarly occurred by accident or coincidence, including the detection of active galaxies, pulsars, and the glow of the bigbang itself.
The fundamental design of a radio telescope is similar to that of an optical telescope, but radio telescopes must be larger because they are looking at longerwavelengths of electromagnetic radiation.
Radio waves are typically between 1 m (3 ft) and 1 km (0.6 mi) in length, while visible light waves are only about 1micrometer, or 0.001 mm (0.00004 in) long.
Radio waves can be focused and gathered more easily than light waves because of their length.
As a result, the bowl-shaped surfaces of radio telescopes do not need to be as smooth as their optical counterparts and are crafted of steel and wire mesh.
Radio astronomers have a unique advantage because faint radio signals can be detected around-the-clock, while the electromagnetic radiation from the Sun makesobserving other wavelengths difficult during the day.
The energy radio telescopes receive from distant sources is extraordinarily weak, less than the energy releasedwhen a snowflake hits the ground.
To detect these faint sources, radio telescopes must be located in valleys and other areas naturally shielded from artificial radiowaves.
The largest radio telescope dish, built into a bowl-shaped valley in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, is 305 m (1,000 ft) across ( see Arecibo Observatory).
To see objects in as much detail as a large optical telescope, a radio telescope would need to be about 50 times the size of the Arecibo telescope.
By simultaneouslylinking signals from two or more radio telescopes in separate locations, a technique called radio interferometry , astronomers create a huge telescope whose power is equal to a telescope as large in diameter as the separation between the two smaller telescopes.
If more telescopes are added, the resolving power is even greater.
One of the largest radio interferometers is the Very Large Array (VLA) near Socorro, New Mexico.
It is a Y-shaped array of 27 dish-shaped antennas 25 m (82 ft) wide,extending over three arms 21 km (13 mi) long.
The VLA can see objects emitting radio waves 1,000 times more sharply than optical telescopes can see light-producingobjects.
The power of the VLA is dwarfed by the VLBI (Very-Long Baseline Interferometer), which consists of ten dish-shaped antennas, each 25 m (82 ft) in diameter,strung between Hawaii and the United States Virgin Islands.
The VLBI is equivalent to a single telescope almost 8,000 km (5,000 mi) across.
One problem that plaguesradio telescopes, the VLA in particular, is interference from ground-based sources of radio waves.
As cellular phone companies, television broadcasters, and air-trafficcontrollers use up frequencies in the radio wave range, radio astronomers struggle to keep frequencies important to their research free of interference.
IV INFRARED TELESCOPES
Infrared astronomy permits scientists to explore the dark dusty region of space both within and beyond our galaxy to uncover clues about the birth of stars, formationof planetary systems, behavior of comets and planetary atmospheres, the core of the Milky Way Galaxy, and the birth of some of the most distant galaxies in theuniverse.
Despite the fact that Earth’s atmospheric water vapor absorbs some infrared light, research can be performed from dry high-altitude observing sites andaircraft.
Even better is infrared astronomy from space-based telescopes, which offer a crystal clear view, free of the background glow produced by Earth’s atmosphere(see Infrared Space Observatory)..
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