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Test Your Astronomy Knowledge Test Your Astronomy Knowledge So you think you know a lot about astronomy? Take this little test and find out. Do not scroll down to the answers until you have answered all five questions. Question #1: One of the following is NOT a type of telescope. Which one? A. Herschelian B. Copernican C. Gregorian D. Newtonian Question #2: What would be the magnification of a refractor telescope if the main objective lens had a focal length of 1200mm and the eyepiece had a focal length of 30mm? A. 36x B. 400x C. 360x D. 40x Question #3: Only one of the following is a type of eye piece design. Which one? A. Monocentric B. Planocentric C. Egocentric D. Orthocentric Question #4: You cannot see the Aurora Borealis in the Southern Hemisphere. True or False? Question #5: If you are going to take extended exposure photographs of the sky, which mount is the best one to use? A. Transit B. Altazimuth C. Equatorial D. Dobsonian Test Answers: Question #1: The correct answer is B, Copernican. Nicolaus Copernicus was an astronomer, but no telescope was named after him. Question #2: The correct answer is D, 40x. You calculate the magnification of a telescope by dividing the focal length of the lens or mirror by the focal length of the eye piece. Question #3: The correct answer is A, Monocentric. Three glass elements are cemented together to make a monocentric eye piece. Question #4: The correct answer is true. The word "Borealis" means northern. In the southern hemisphere, Aurora Australis is visible. Question #5: The correct answer is C, Equatorial. An equatorial has to be driven by only one axis to track stars as the earth rotates. So how did you do on this little test? If you answered three of the five questions correctly, you beat the average. If you answered fewer than three questions correctly, perhaps you should either study or take up another hobby.
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Telescopes.com: Shop Telescopes and Telescope Eyepieces
Space Travel The Planet Saturn The planet Saturn resembles the planet Jupiter in many ways. Saturn is also a planet that has very little if any solid matter. It is believed that there is a hard rocky core, but that belief is unproven (albeit very probable) theory. Saturn, like Jupiter, is made up of gases and liquids. There is an internal heat source. We know this because Saturn radiates more energy than it receives. Saturn rotates fast. It makes one complete revolution once every 10 or 11 hours. Saturn rotates around the sun once every 29.5 years. Because it rotates so fast, Saturn is flattened at the poles, making it an almost oblate planet. The space probes, Pioneer 11, Mariner 11 and 12, and Voyager I and II, provide the best and most accurate information to astronomers about the planet Saturn, even though the Hubble space telescope takes very good images of Saturn. The space probes get "up close and personal," so to speak, and have provided information about Saturn that nothing else could have provided. Wind velocity on Saturn is extreme. Wind speeds of more than 1,118 mph have been recorded. Unlike the winds on Jupiter, however, wind speeds on Saturn do not seem to be closely related to the positions of the belts and bands. The rings around Saturn are one of the most interesting features. Really high-resolution pictures taken on the Voyager missions tell us that the rings are actually made up of hundreds of thousands of very small rings. The evidence suggests that the rings are composed of particles that are mostly ice crystals. A lot has been learned about the rings of Saturn over the last 20 or so years, but there is so much about them that is still a mystery. |
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Binoculars for Astronomy Sir Christopher Wren Sir Christopher Wren once said, "In things to be seen at once, much variety makes confusion, another vice of beauty. In things that are not seen at once, and have no respect one to another, great variety is commendable, provided this variety transgress not the rules of optics and geometry." For those of you who do not know, Christopher Wren was an English architect and mathematician who became Savilian Professor of Astronomy at Oxford in 1661. He is most famous for the buildings that he designed after the Great Fire of London. Wren was interested in many things, and over his lifetime, he made many contributions to scientific knowledge and in many different ways. For example, he constructed a transparent beehive for the purpose of scientific observation; he studied the moon and experimented on terrestrial magnetism; and he also performed the first successful injection of a substance into a dog's bloodstream. Along with Sir Paul Neile, Wren constructed a 35-foot telescope. During this timeframe, Wren also studied and improved the microscope and the telescope. Wren was fascinated by the planet, Saturn. He began his observations of Saturn about 1652 with the intention of explaining the rings. Wren developed a hypothesis which he wrote in De Corpore Saturni. Before his work could be published however, Christian Huygens (a Dutch astronomer) presented his theory of the rings of Saturn. Wren immediately recognized the fact that Huygens' was a better hypothesis than his own, so De Corpore Saturni was never published. Wren constructed a beautifully detailed model of the moon and gave it to the king. Although Sir Christopher Wren eventually turned his attention to architecture, he remained fascinated by astronomy all of his life.
Related Topics: The Planet Venus,
Ham the Chimp, Asteroids, Comets and Meteors
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