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refrangible. No doubt if this had been the case, a perfect telescope could have
been produced by properly shaping the object glass. But when Newton had
demonstrated that light was by no means so simple as had been supposed, it
became obvious that a satisfactory refracting telescope was an impossibility
when only a single object lens was employed, however carefully that lens
might have been wrought. Such an objective might, no doubt, be made to
conduct any one group of rays of a particular shade to the same focus, but the
rays of other colours in the beam of white light must necessarily travel
somewhat astray. In this way Newton accounted for a great part of the
difficulties which had hitherto beset the attempts to construct a perfect
refracting telescope.
We now know how these difficulties can be, to a great extent, overcome, by
employing for the objective a composite lens made of two pieces of glass
possessing different qualities. To these achromatic object glasses, as they are
called, the great development of astronomical knowledge, since Newton’s
time, is due. But it must be remarked that, although the theoretical possibility
of constructing an achromatic lens was investigated by Newton, he certainly
came to the conclusion that the difficulty could not be removed by employing
a composite objective with two different kinds of glass. In this his marvellous
sagacity in the interpretation of nature seems for once to have deserted him.
We can, however, hardly regret that Newton failed to discover the achromatic
objective, when we observe that it was in consequence of his deeming an
achromatic objective to be impossible that he was led to the invention of the
reflecting telescope.
Finding, as he believed, that the defects of the telescope could not be
remedied by any application of the principle of refraction, he was led to look
in quite a different direction for the improvement of the tool on which the
advancement of astronomy depended. The refraction of light depended, as he
had found, upon the colour of the light. The laws of reflection were, however,
quite independent of the colour. Whether rays be red or green, blue or yellow,
they are all reflected in precisely the same manner from a mirror.
Accordingly, Newton perceived that if he could construct a telescope the
action of which depended upon reflection, instead of upon refraction, the
difficulty which had hitherto proved an insuperable obstacle to the
improvement of the instrument would be evaded.
For this purpose Newton fashioned a concave mirror from a mixture of
copper and tin, a combination which gives a surface with almost the lustre of
silver. When the light of a star fell upon the surface, an image of the star was
produced in the focus of this mirror, and then this image was examined by a
magnifying eye-piece. Such is the principle of the famous reflecting telescope
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Buch Great Astronoms - Isaac Newton"
Great Astronoms
Isaac Newton
- Titel
- Great Astronoms
- Untertitel
- Isaac Newton
- Autor
- Robert S. Ball
- Datum
- 1907
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 22
- Schlagwörter
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik