The Solar System

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
CHAPTER 6 | LIGHT AND TELESCOPES 121


  1. Small telescopes are often advertised as “200 power” or “magnifi es
    200 times.” As someone knowledgeable about astronomical telescopes,
    how would you improve such advertisements?

  2. Not too many years ago an astronomer said, “Some people think
    I should give up photographic plates.” Why might she change to
    something else?

  3. What purpose do the colors in a false-color image or false-color radio
    map serve?

  4. How is chromatic aberration related to a prism spectrograph?

  5. Why would radio astronomers build identical radio telescopes in many
    different places around the world?

  6. Why do radio telescopes have poor resolving power?

  7. Why must telescopes observing in the far-infrared be cooled to low
    temperatures?

  8. What might you detect with an X-ray telescope that you could not
    detect with an infrared telescope?

  9. The moon has no atmosphere at all. What advantages would you have
    if you built an observatory on the lunar surface?

  10. How Do We Know? How is the resolution of an astronomical image
    related to the precision of a measurement?


Discussion Questions



  1. Why does the wavelength response of the human eye match so well the
    visual window of Earth’s atmosphere?

  2. Most people like beautiful sunsets with brightly glowing clouds, bright
    moonlit nights, and twinkling stars. Astronomers don’t. Why?


Problems



  1. The thickness of the plastic in plastic bags is about 0.001 mm. How
    many wavelengths of red light is this?

  2. What is the wavelength of radio waves transmitted by a radio station
    with a frequency of 100 million cycles per second?

  3. Compare the light-gathering powers of one of the 10-m Keck
    telescopes and a 0.5-m telescope.

  4. How does the light-gathering power of one of the Keck telescopes
    compare with that of the human eye? (Hint: Assume that the pupil of
    your eye can open to about 0.8 cm.)

  5. What is the resolving power of a 25-cm telescope? What do two stars
    1.5 arc seconds apart look like through this telescope?

  6. Most of Galileo’s telescopes were only about 2 cm in diameter. Should
    he have been able to resolve the two stars mentioned in Problem 5?
    7. How does the resolving power of a 5-m telescope compare with that
    of the Hubble Space Telescope? Why does the HST outperform a 5-m
    telescope?
    8. If you build a telescope with a focal length of 1.3 m, what focal
    length should the eyepiece have to give a magnifi cation of 100 times?
    9. Astronauts observing from a space station need a telescope with a
    light-gathering power 15,000 times that of the human eye, capable of
    resolving detail as small as 0.1 arc seconds and having a magnifying
    power of 250. Design a telescope to meet their needs. Could you test
    your design by observing stars from Earth?
    10. A spy satellite orbiting 400 km above Earth is supposedly capable
    of counting individual people in a crowd. Roughly what minimum-
    diameter telescope must the satellite carry? (Hint: Use the small-angle
    formula.)


Learning to Look



  1. The two images at the right
    show a star before and after
    an adaptive optics system was
    switched on. What causes the
    distortion in the fi rst image,
    and how does adaptive optics
    correct the image?

  2. The star images in the photo at the
    right are tiny disks, but the diameter
    of these disks is not related to the
    diameter of the stars. Explain why the
    telescope can’t resolve the diameter of
    the stars.

  3. The X-ray image at right shows the remains of
    an exploded star. Explain why images recorded
    by telescopes in space are often displayed in
    false color rather than in the “colors” received
    by the telescope.


ESO

NASA, ESA and G. Meylan

NASA/CXC/PSU/S. Park
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