Early Reflectors: Ell Into The 18th Century
Early Reflectors: Ell Into The 18th Century
Early Reflectors: Ell Into The 18th Century
A Scottish mathematician,
James Gregory, proposed a new design
for a reflecting telescope in his 1663
book Optica Promota. Gregory's
theoretical design featured a primary
mirror with a parabolic curvature. It
would reflect light to an elliptical
secondary mirror, which reflected it
back down through a hole in the
primary to the astronomer's eye. The
Gregorian design, along with the
superficially similar Cassegrain design
(named after an obscure 18th century
Frenchman), would eventually become
the predominant design for reflecting
telescopes. But at the time these
designs were proposed, opticians could
not polish mirrors in curves that were
not spherical. Some London opticians Portrait of James Gregory
tried to produce reflecting telescopes,
but failed.
The most significant development came when Isaac Newton, after his
groundbreaking research in light and optics, concluded that refracting
telescopes would always be defective. For any lens would, like a prism,
disperse the colors of light, in direct proportion to the refraction. The result
was chromatic aberration—the image of a white star would always show a
smear of colors. So Newton turned his attention to the design of a practical
telescope which would use a mirror to collect starlight.
Refinement of the
Early Reflecting Telescope
LISTEN to William Herschel, a musician who moved from Hanover to England and
turned to astronomy, directed his first efforts toward building refracting
sample of Sir
telescopes. But the lengthy tubes annoyed him (he made one as long as 30
William Herschel's
feet), and he turned his attention to mirrors. By the late 1770s, Herschel had
Oboe Concerto in
built several reflectors. His most successful one had a 6�-inch mirror and
C Major (from third was 7 feet long. He used this telescope to compile the first substantial
movement, Allegretto) on
the CD Sir William catalog of double stars and, in 1781, to discover the planet Uranus. This
Herschel, Music by the discovery brought Herschel royal recognition — and an annual salary of
Father of Modern �200, which allowed him to practice astronomy full-time.
Astronomy
From Newport Classic.
[380K MP3]
picture of William and Caroline Herschel
About Herschel In 1783, using the 20-foot reflector, Herschel began to search the night skies
& Nebulae for the dim patches of light in the skies called nebulae. By 1784, he reported MORE
that his telescope could resolve individual stars in nebulae previously Herschel
identified by the French astronomer Charles Messier and that he had also foot tele
found hundreds of new nebulae.
from
Smithso
[Herschel] has discovered fifteen hundred universes! How
many more he may find who can conjecture?
—English novelist Fanny Burney, 1786
Back: Next:
The First Golden Era
Telescpoes of Refractors
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