mirror reflection: the glass lenses where producing a blurry image so they have been replaced by mirrors
The word 'telescope' is a noun.Example: "I don't know how to use a telescope."
A Reflecting telescope has a lot of zooming technologies and the High Power telescope is highly powered.
The only three syllable word that can be made out of some of the letters in telescope is "celeste"
A reflecting telescope uses mirrors while refracting telescopes uses lens. The refracting telescope also had chromatic aberration and bad resolution while the reflecting telescope had none of these.
The HST is a collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) is responsible for the scientific operation of the telescope and delivery of data products to astronomers.
If they get changed
In the early 1600's, the "Telescope" was invented, this in turn changed astronomy forever.
Yes it has. there is high tech things added to it.
They have changed because now there is a telescope in space called the "Hubble". I can see things that regular telescopes on Earth cannot see.
Because we still use telescopes today, and it helped us build a more & new advanced telescope today
No, Edwin Hubble had nothing directly to do with the Hubble Telescope, it was named for him because he profoundly changed the understanding of the nature of the universe. Hubble died before the the physical exploration of space began. Hubble also created his own Hubble telescope back in 1929 but it is not the orbiting Hubble telescope. Go to the NASA website for more information.
It is a reflecting telescope
Telescope eyepieces are important of any visual telescope. It is the main part of the telescope and is what determines how the object will look like through the telescope.
Telescope.
it is a reflector telescope
The Hubble Space Telescope has a number of instruments, but the primary one is an optical telescope.
No. A Dutchman created a refractive telescope. Newton improved the telescope by creating the Reflective Telescope.