Hubble Space Telescope



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SUMMARY


telescope is a device designed to collect as much light as possible from some distant source and deliver it to a detector for detailed study. Reflecting telescopes use a mirror to concentrate and focus the light. Refracting telescopes use a lens; refraction is the bending of light as it passes from one medium to another. All astronomical telescopes larger than about 1 m in diameter use mirrors in their design.The prime focus of a telescope is the point where the incoming beam is focused and where analysis instruments may be placed. TheNewtonian and Cassegrain telescope designs employ secondary mirrors to avoid placing heavy equipment at the prime focus. The light collected by a telescope may be processed in a number of ways. It can be made to form an image, a photometer may be used to make detailed measurements of the energy received, or a spectrometer may study its spectrum.

The light-gathering power of a telescope depends on its collecting area, which is proportional to the square of the mirror diameter. To study the faintest sources of radiation, astronomers must use large telescopes. Another important aspect of a telescope is its angular resolution, the ability to distinguish between light sources lying close together on the sky. One limitation on the resolution of a telescope is diffraction, which makes it impossible to focus a beam perfectly. The amount of diffraction is proportional to the wavelength of the radiation under study and inversely proportional to the size of the mirror. Thus, at any given wavelength, larger telescopes suffer least from the effects of diffraction. The resolution of most ground-based optical telescopes is actually limited by seeing—the blurring effect of Earth’s turbulent atmosphere, which smears the pointlike images of stars out into seeing disks a few arc seconds in diameter. Radio and space-based telescopes do not suffer from atmospheric effects, so their resolution is determined by the effects of diffraction.

Most modern telescopes now use charge-coupled devices, or CCDs, instead of photographic plates to collect their data. The field of view is divided into an array of millions of pixels that accumulate an electric charge when light strikes them. CCDs are many times more sensitive than photographic plates, and the resultant data are easily saved directly on disk or tape for later image processing.

Using active optics, in which a telescope’s environment and focus are carefully monitored and controlled, and adaptive optics, in which the blurring effects of atmospheric turbulence are corrected for in real time, astronomers can now come close to diffraction-limited resolution in some ground-based instruments.



Radio telescopes are conceptually similar in construction to optical reflectors. However, radio telescopes are generally much larger than optical instruments, for two reasons. First, the amount of radio radiation reaching Earth from space is tiny compared with optical wavelengths, so a large collecting area is essential. Second, the long wavelengths of radio waves mean that diffraction severely limits the resolution unless large instruments are used.

In order to increase the effective area of a telescope, and hence improve its resolution, several separate instruments may be combined into a device called an interferometer. Usinginterferometry, radio telescopes can produce images sharper than those from the best optical telescopes. Infrared interferometers are under construction, and optical interferometric systems are under active development.



Infrared telescopes and ultraviolet telescopes are generally similar in design to optical systems. Infrared studies in some parts of the infrared range can be carried out using large ground-based systems. Ultraviolet astronomy must be carried out from space. High-energy telescopes study the X-ray and gamma-ray regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. X-ray telescopes can form images of their field of view, although the mirror design is more complex than for lower-energy instruments. Gamma-ray telescopes simply point in a certain direction and count photons received. Because the atmosphere is opaque at these short wavelengths, both types of telescopes must be placed in space.

Radio and other nonoptical telescopes are essential to studies of the universe because they allow astronomers to probe regions of space that are completely opaque to visible light and to study the many objects that emit little or no optical radiation at all.


SELF-TEST: TRUE OR FALSE?


1. The primary purpose of any telescope is to produce an enormously magnified image of the field of view. HINT

2. A refracting telescope cannot form an image of its field of view. HINT

3. A Newtonian telescope has no secondary mirror. HINT

4. A Cassegrain telescope has a hole in the middle of the primary mirror to allow light reflected from its secondary mirror to reach a focus behind the primary mirror. HINT

5. The term “seeing” is used to describe how faint an object can be detected by a telescope.HINT

6. The primary advantage to using the Hubble Space Telescope is the increased amount of “nighttime” available to it. HINT

7. One of the primary advantages of CCDs over photograph plates is their high efficiency in detecting light. HINT

8. The Hubble Space Telescope can observe objects in the optical, infrared, and ultraviolet parts of the spectrum. HINT

9. The Keck telescopes contain the largest single mirrors ever produced. HINT

10. Radio telescopes are large, in part to improve their angular resolution, which is poor because of the long wavelengths at which they observe. HINT

11. Radio telescopes are large, in part because the sources of radio radiation they observe are very faint. HINT

12. Radio telescopes have to have surfaces as smooth as those in optical telescope mirrors.HINT

13. Infrared astronomy must be done from space. HINT

14. Because the ozone layer absorbs ultraviolet light, astronomers must make observations in the ultraviolet from the highest mountaintops. HINT

15. Gamma-ray telescopes employ the same basic design as optical instruments. HINT






SELF-TEST: FILL IN THE BLANK


1. A telescope that uses a lens to focus light is called a _____ telescope. HINT

2. A telescope that uses a mirror to focus light is called a _____ telescope. HINT

3. All large modern telescopes are of the _____ type. HINT

4.The light-gathering power of a telescope is determined by the _____ of its mirror or lens.HINT

5. The angular resolution of a telescope is limited by the _____ of the telescope and the _____ of the radiation being observed. HINT

6. The angular resolution of ground-based optical telescopes is more seriously limited by Earth’s _____ than by diffraction. HINT

7. The best optical telescopes on Earth can see angular detail down to about _____ arc second. HINT

8. CCDs produce images in _____ form that can be easily transmitted, stored, and later processed by computers. HINT

9. Active optics and adaptive optics are both being used to improve the _____ of ground-based optical telescopes. HINT

10. All radio telescopes are of the _____ design. HINT

11. An _____ is two or more telescopes used in tandem to observe the same object, in order to improve angular resolution. HINT

12. ______, ______, and ______ astronomy can be done only from above Earth’s atmosphere. HINT

13. An object with a temperature of 300 K would be best observed with an ______ telescope.HINT

14. The mirrors in X-ray telescopes are different in design from those in optical instruments because X-rays tend to be ______, rather than reflected, by solid surfaces. HINT

15. Gamma-ray telescopes are unable to form ______ of their fields of view. HINT






REVIEW AND DISCUSSION


1. Cite two reasons why astronomers are continually building larger and larger telescopes.HINT

2. List three advantages of reflecting telescopes over refracting telescopes. HINT

3. What and where are the largest optical telescopes in use today? HINT

4. How does Earth’s atmosphere affect what is seen through an optical telescope? HINT

5. What advantages does the Hubble Space Telescope have over ground-based telescopes? List some disadvantages. HINT

6. What are the advantages of a CCD over a photographic plate? HINT

7. What is image processing? HINT

8. Is the resolution of a 2-m optical telescope on Earth’s surface more limited by atmospheric turbulence or by the effects of diffraction? HINT

9. How do astronomers use active optics to improve telescope resolution? HINT

10. How do astronomers use adaptive optics to improve telescope resolution? HINT

11. Why do radio telescopes have to be very large? HINT

12. What kind of astronomical objects can we best study with radio techniques? HINT

13. What is interferometry, and what problem in radio astronomy does it address? HINT

14. Is interferometry limited to radio astronomy? HINT

15. Compare the highest resolution attainable with optical telescopes with the highest resolution attainable with radio telescopes (including interferometers). HINT

16. Why do infrared satellites have to be cooled? HINT

17. Are there any ground-based ultraviolet observatories? HINT

18. In what ways do the mirrors in X-ray telescopes differ from those found in optical instruments? HINT

19. What are the main advantages of studying objects at many different wavelengths of radiation? HINT

20. Our eyes can see light with an angular resolution of 1'. Suppose our eyes detected only infrared radiation, with 1º angular resolution. Would we be able to make our way around on Earth’s surface? To read? To sculpt? To create technology? HINT

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