Half-hours with the Telescope eBook

Richard Anthony Proctor
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Half-hours with the Telescope.

Half-hours with the Telescope eBook

Richard Anthony Proctor
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Half-hours with the Telescope.

But even if the image formed by the object-glass were perfect, yet this image, viewed through a single convex lens of short focus placed as in fig. 1, would appear curved, indistinct, coloured, and also distorted, because viewed by pencils of light which do not pass through the centre of the eye-glass.  These effects can be diminished (but not entirely removed together) by using an eye-piece consisting of two lenses instead of a single eye-glass.  The two forms of eye-piece most commonly employed are exhibited in figs. 5 and 6.  Fig. 5 is Huyghens’ eye-piece, called also the negative eye-piece, because a real image is formed behind the field-glass (the lens which lies nearest to the object-glass).  Fig. 6 represents Ramsden’s eye-piece, called also the positive eye-piece, because the real image formed by the object-glass lies in front of the field-glass.

[Illustration:  Fig. 5.]

[Illustration:  Fig. 6.]

The course of a slightly oblique pencil through either eye-piece is exhibited in the figures.  The lenses are usually plano-convex, the convexities being turned towards the object-glass in the negative eye-piece, and towards each other in the positive eye-piece.  Coddington has shown, however, that the best forms for the lenses of the negative eye-piece are those shown in fig. 5.

The negative eye-piece, being achromatic, is commonly employed in all observations requiring distinct vision only.  But as it is clearly unfit for observations requiring micrometrical measurement, or reference to fixed lines at the focus of the object-glass, the positive eye-piece is used for these purposes.

For observing objects at great elevations the diagonal eye-tube is often convenient.  Its construction is shown in fig. 7.  ABC is a totally reflecting prism of glass.  The rays from the object-glass fall on the face AB, are totally reflected on the face BC, and emerge through the face AC.  In using this eye-piece, it must be remembered that it lengthens the sliding eye-tube, which must therefore be thrust further in, or the object will not be seen in focus.  There is an arrangement by which the change of direction is made to take place between the two glasses of the eye-piece.  With this arrangement (known as the diagonal eye-piece) no adjustment of the eye-tube is required.  However, for amateurs’ telescopes the more convenient arrangement is the diagonal eye-tube, since it enables the observer to apply any eye-piece he chooses, just as with the simple sliding eye-tube.

[Illustration:  Fig. 7.]

We come next to the important question of the mounting of our telescope.

The best known, and, in some respects, the simplest method of mounting a telescope for general observation is that known as the altitude-and-azimuth mounting.  In this method the telescope is pointed towards an object by two motions,—­one giving the tube the required altitude (or elevation), the other giving it the required azimuth (or direction as respects the compass points).

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Half-hours with the Telescope from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.