enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: keplerian telescope lens

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refracting_telescope

    Engraved illustration of a 46 m (150 ft) focal length Keplerian astronomical refracting telescope built by Johannes Hevelius. [11] The Keplerian telescope, invented by Johannes Kepler in 1611, is an improvement on Galileo's design. [12] It uses a convex lens as the eyepiece instead of Galileo's concave one.

  3. 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 ...

  4. Lick Observatory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lick_Observatory

    Manufacturing of the lens took until 1885 and it was delivered to :the observatory on December 29, 1886. [4] Warner & Swasey designed and built the telescope mounting. The telescope, built with this lens, became the world's largest refracting telescope from when it saw first light on January 3, 1888, until the construction of Yerkes Observatory ...

  5. Johannes Kepler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Kepler

    In it, Kepler set out the theoretical basis of double-convex converging lenses and double-concave diverging lenses—and how they are combined to produce a Galilean telescope—as well as the concepts of real vs. virtual images, upright vs. inverted images, and the effects of focal length on magnification and reduction.

  6. History of the telescope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_telescope

    Notes on Hans Lippershey's unsuccessful telescope patent in 1608. The first record of a telescope comes from the Netherlands in 1608. It is in a patent filed by Middelburg spectacle-maker Hans Lippershey with the States General of the Netherlands on 2 October 1608 for his instrument "for seeing things far away as if they were nearby." [12] A few weeks later another Dutch instrument-maker ...

  7. Timeline of telescope technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_telescope...

    1611 — Johannes Kepler describes the optics of lenses (see his books Astronomiae Pars Optica and Dioptrice), including a new kind of astronomical telescope with two convex lenses (the 'Keplerian' telescope). 1616 — Niccolo Zucchi claims at this time he experimented with a concave bronze mirror, attempting to make a reflecting telescope.

  8. Kepler space telescope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler_space_telescope

    The telescope has a mass of 1,039 kilograms (2,291 lb) and contains a Schmidt camera with a 0.95-meter (37.4 in) front corrector plate (lens) feeding a 1.4-meter (55 in) primary mirror—at the time of its launch this was the largest mirror on any telescope outside Earth orbit, [47] though the Herschel Space Observatory took this title a few ...

  9. Anton Maria Schyrleus of Rheita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anton_Maria_Schyrleus_of...

    In Oculus Enoch et Eliae, besides describing one of his inventions, an eyepiece for a Keplerian telescope, which left the image reverted, it also contained a long section on binocular telescopes, which greatly influenced other telescope-makers and opticians in the next century. His section on binocular telescopes is not illustrated, but the ...

  1. Ads

    related to: keplerian telescope lens