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telescope maker. The French were more than happy


to bid him adieu.


Ritchey’s entire career in France had yielded only


a 0.5-meter Ritchey-Chrétien telescope mounted on


a wooden frame. The 40-inch telescope he designed


and built for the Naval Observatory, which went


into service in 1935, was Ritchey’s masterpiece,


nearly 25 years in the making. The only trouble was


that it had been built and installed on the observa-


tory grounds in Washington, D.C. Imagine the


Mona Lisa hanging on the wall of a barbershop.


The site just wasn’t very good.


A long legacy


Ritchey died in November 1945 at age 80. The


40-inch Naval Observatory telescope, now the


ancestor of all large modern research telescopes,


was moved in 1955 to a more optimal location near


Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. There,


the likes of John S. Hall and Arthur Hoag exploited


its superior resolving capability. The second large


Ritchey-Chrétien ref lector, the 84-inch telescope at


Kitt Peak National Observatory, was completed in


the spring of 1960, half a century after the first seed


of the idea took root in the fertile mind of its cre-


ator. From there, the Ritchey-Chrétien system swept


the world.


Ritchey was probably the greatest visionary tele-


scope maker of all time. In addition to the Ritchey-


Chrétien telescope, his ideas included cellular


mirrors, lightweight mirrors that respond rapidly to


temperature changes, internal dome temperature


control, thermal distortion-reducing telescope


mountings, and making rapid focus changes to opti-


mize f luctuating seeing conditions. These concepts


have now been used in nearly every large land-based


and space telescope since the completion of the


200-inch Hale ref lector — the last to use a parabolic


primary mirror — at Palomar Mountain in 1948.


The groundbreaking and historic Hubble Space


Telescope, as well as future supergiants like the


Thirty Meter Telescope in Hawaii, employ Ritchey-


Chrétien systems.


Had he been able to suppress his desire and


ambition, and fallen in line during the 100-inch


telescope’s development in the 1910s, Ritchey might


have had the opportunity to develop his “new


curves” system in smaller telescopes first, working


out the kinks along the way. In such a world, the


Hale Telescope could have been the first large


Ritchey-Chrétien telescope. This would have ben-


efited Hubble, Walter Baade, Allan Sandage, and


other cosmologists. But Ritchey’s insubordination


and Hale’s ignorance sealed the 200-inch’s fate


30 years before it was completed.


By contrast, Chrétien, who died in 1956 at age


77, was highly regarded during his lifetime and


rewarded handsomely for his contributions to the


field of optics. In addition to his Academy Award
and Prix Janssen medal, he received the Valz Prize
from the French Academy of Sciences. The
American Astronomical Society’s Chrétien
International Research Grant, which was created
in 1982 to award up to $20,000 each year in sup-
port of international observational astronomy,
was named in his honor.
Ritchey never lived to see his optical and instru-
ment designs “proclaim the glory of God,” as he
frequently wrote. Instead, his final years were spent
writing draft after draft of books about the astro-
nomical equipment he dreamed would one day
convey the true nature of the heavens. The fact that
he was never able to find a publisher for these vol-
umes was perhaps the final insult in a life dedi-
cated to designing the most advanced astronomical
equipment ever conceived. His legacy is written in
the incredible cosmological advancements his sig-
nature telescope design has allowed and will con-
tinue to generate well into the future.

Ron Voller is a writer of science history based in New
York City. His forthcoming book, Companion Stars: The
Misfits Hubble and Humason Discover the Big Bang, is
due for publication in 2020.

ABOVE: The Thirty
Meter Telescope
currently under
construction (shown
completed in this
artist’s concept)
will employ a Ritchey-
Chrétien design to
achieve the sharpest
images possible. TMT
INTERNATIONAL OBSERVATORY

LEFT: The 200-inch
Hale Telescope,
housed at the Palomar
Observatory, was the
last major astronomical
workhorse telescope to
use the Cassegrain
design. CALTECH/PALOMAR
OBSERVATORY
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