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19 - On the Diffraction of Object-Glasses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

In observing the Sun with a telescope astronomers have to adopt some device in order to obviate the injurious effects which the intense light and heat would otherwise have on the eye. The most obvious way of doing this would be to contract the aperture of the object-glass, until the amount of light was reduced to within the necessary limit. But, as is well known, such a course cannot be followed without an enormous sacrifice of definition. The image, in the focus of the object-glass, of a mathematical point is a patch of light surrounded by rings, the dimensions of the system for a given wavelength varying inversely with the diameter of the lens. If this be reduced by a diaphragm, the patches dilate, those whose centres are within a small distance overlap, and the resolving power of the telescope suffers.

It has occurred to me that the result would be quite otherwise if, instead of the marginal, the central parts of the glass were stopped off, so that the light, coming from the lens to the focus, formed a hollow cone of rays. In this case the peculiar advantage of a large aperture would not be lost, while any imperfections arising from outstanding spherical aberration would be much diminished.

The general dependence of the diffraction phenomena which occur at the focus of a telescope on the aperture and wave-length may be explained without mathematical analysis. Consider the centre of the image given by a well-corrected object-glass, as illuminated by secondary waves coming from every part.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 163 - 166
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1899

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