enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Aperture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture

    In some contexts, especially in photography and astronomy, aperture refers to the opening diameter of the aperture stop through which light can pass. For example, in a telescope, the aperture stop is typically the edges of the objective lens or mirror (or of the mount that holds it). One then speaks of a telescope as having, for example, a 100 ...

  3. Adaptive optics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_optics

    Typically the circular telescope aperture is split up into an array of pixels in a wavefront sensor, either using an array of small lenslets (a Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor), or using a curvature or pyramid sensor which operates on images of the telescope aperture. The mean wavefront perturbation in each pixel is calculated.

  4. Objective (optics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objective_(optics)

    In a telescope the objective is the lens at the front end of a refracting telescope (such as binoculars or telescopic sights) or the image-forming primary mirror of a reflecting or catadioptric telescope. A telescope's light-gathering power and angular resolution are both directly related to the diameter (or "aperture") of its objective lens or ...

  5. Optical telescope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_telescope

    The telescope is more a discovery of optical craftsmen than an invention of a scientist. [1] [2] The lens and the properties of refracting and reflecting light had been known since antiquity, and theory on how they worked was developed by ancient Greek philosophers, preserved and expanded on in the medieval Islamic world, and had reached a significantly advanced state by the time of the ...

  6. Aperture synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture_synthesis

    Aperture synthesis is possible only if both the amplitude and the phase of the incoming signal are measured by each telescope. For radio frequencies, this is possible by electronics, while for optical frequencies, the electromagnetic field cannot be measured directly and correlated in software, but must be propagated by sensitive optics and interfered optically.

  7. Eyepiece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyepiece

    Eyepieces are differentiated by their field stop, which is the narrowest aperture that light entering the eyepiece must pass through to reach the field lens of the eyepiece. Due to the effects of these variables, the term "field of view" nearly always refers to one of two meanings: True or Telescope's field of view

  8. Condenser (optics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condenser_(optics)

    The aperture and angle of the light cone must be adjusted (via the size of the diaphragm) for each different objective lens with different numerical apertures. Condensers typically consist of a variable-aperture diaphragm and one or more lenses. Light from the illumination source of the microscope passes through the diaphragm and is focused by ...

  9. The long and storied history of Aperture Science - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-03-25-the-long-and-storied...

    Since the early '50s, Aperture Science has been working hard on some pretty impressive shower curtain technology, perfecting something called the "Heimlich Counter-Maneuver" (designed to interrupt ...