DK Science: Telescopes

Just as our eyes cannot see small objects, so they cannot see things that are very far off. Even when things are millions of miles away, telescopes show them very clearly, The long tubes gather light rays from distant objects and make magnified images of them that seem nearer. Some telescopes use lenses to gather light, while others use mirrors.

X-RAY OF BINOCULARS

A pair of binoculars works like two small telescopes joined together, one for each eye. A gearwheel in the centre of the binoculars alters the distance between the lenses and brings the image in the binoculars into sharp focus.

REFRACTING TELESCOPE

This small, amateur instrument is called a refracting telescope because the lenses inside it bend or refract light. It is difficult to make large lenses, so refracting telescopes tend to be small and not very powerful. The first refracting telescope was built in 1608 by a Dutch scientist, Jan Lippershey, who lived from about 1570 to 1619.

REFLECTING TELESCOPE

This is the most powerful type of telescope. It uses mirrors instead of lenses because large mirrors are easier to manufacture than large lenses and make better images. A large, central mirror collects light from a distant object and a smaller mirror reflects the light into the eyepiece.

Copyright © 2007 Dorling Kindersley