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Large telescope mirror
Large telescope mirror













large telescope mirror

And a fourth telescope, one “only” 8 meters in diameter, will use advanced technology to image the entire night sky every three days. During the next several years, researchers expect three instruments that are more than twice the size of their closest competitors to start scanning the skies. Now, astronomers stand on the threshold of a new telescope revolution. Again, this was only possible with the increased firepower of the latest telescopes. Shockingly, researchers discovered that the expansion of the universe is accelerating. With an essential assist from the 2.4-meter Hubble Space Telescope orbiting above Earth’s image-distorting atmosphere, these instruments could analyze a few dozen distant Type Ia supernovas - the cataclysmic explosions of white dwarf stars. These turned out to be supermassive black holes accreting matter in the centers of galaxies, a science-fiction fantasy when the Hale Telescope was built.īy the 1990s, technology advanced far enough to usher in an era of telescopes 8 to 10 meters across (26 to 33 feet), and the same story played out once more. In the early 1960s, astronomer Maarten Schmidt used the instrument to analyze unusual, “quasi-stellar radio sources”- quasars for short. History repeated itself starting in 1949, when the 200-inch Hale Telescope took its first photograph of the night sky. Within a decade, astronomer Edwin Hubble used it - then the largest telescope in the world, at 100 inches across - to discover that galaxies exist beyond the Milky Way, and that the universe is expanding. When the Hooker Telescope first looked skyward in 1917, no one knew what wonders it might reveal.















Large telescope mirror