The Hubble Space Telescope is not affected by atmospheric distortion, providing clearer images than ground-based telescopes. Ground-based telescopes have the advantage of being easier to upgrade and maintain than a space-based telescope like the Hubble.
True. When you come closer to a distant object with a telescope, the rays of light entering the telescope become less parallel as the object appears closer, and the lens or mirror in the telescope needs to adjust the focal length to focus properly on the object.
A telescope is used to make distant objects appear closer and clearer by gathering and focusing light from faraway objects, allowing for magnified images to be viewed through the eyepiece.
Hubble's Law states that the recessional velocity of galaxies is directly proportional to their distance from Earth. This observation implies that the universe is expanding, with more distant galaxies moving away faster than those closer to us. The relationship is often expressed with the equation ( v = H_0 \times d ), where ( v ) is the velocity, ( d ) is the distance, and ( H_0 ) is Hubble's constant. This law provides strong evidence for the Big Bang theory and the overall dynamics of the universe.
In a refracting telescope, the image is formed by the objective lens. This lens gathers and focuses light from distant objects to create a real image at its focal plane. The eyepiece lens then magnifies this image for the viewer, allowing for a clearer and closer observation of the celestial object.
it is 24000 metres
The Hubble Space Telescope is not affected by atmospheric distortion, providing clearer images than ground-based telescopes. Ground-based telescopes have the advantage of being easier to upgrade and maintain than a space-based telescope like the Hubble.
It is very hard... Maybe impossible unless u use the hubble space telescope because stars come in various sizes.
From a distant viewpoint, the Hubble Telescope looks like a tiny dot. Coming up closer, it looks a little bit like a elongated cylinder covered in tin foil, similar to the cardboard core of a roll of toilet paper covered in tin foil, with wings (solar panels) attached to both sides.
Never more than about 350 miles closer than you can be.That's about 0.0000038 of the total distance from you to the sun.And for about half of the time, the HST is farther from the sun than you are.
There are varying answers to that as we look at the night sky in many different ways, we use radio waves, microwaves, x-rays, infra-red, gamma and much much more. The top 5 Telescopes are as follows in no order. The Keck Observatory, basically 2 10 meter wide telescopes. Hubble, still running on an old Intel 486 processor. Spitzer Space Telescope. Unlike its its sibling Hubble which looks in to visible light Spitzer looks at infrared. Fermi Gama ray space Telescope. Large Binocular Telescope Arizona. 10 times more powerful than Hubble.
Hubble's Law states that the receding velocity of an object A, with relative to object B, is directly proportional to the distance between the two objects. It allows us to calculate the speeds of celestial bodies with respect to Earth, given that we know the distance to that object(which can be found by using Doppler's Red Shift).
The Hubble Space Telescope, along with most man-made satellites, is in a low earth orbit. It remains 559 km from the earth. This is much closer than the moon, which orbits at an average distance of 384,392 km. It would be very difficult to have a man made satellite orbit further away from the earth than the moon without the moon interfering in its orbit.
huh i didn't get what your saying a telescope is to make stuff look closer from the word scope
True. When you come closer to a distant object with a telescope, the rays of light entering the telescope become less parallel as the object appears closer, and the lens or mirror in the telescope needs to adjust the focal length to focus properly on the object.
the lense of a telescope is round which makes things seem closer
A telescope is an optical instrument used to make distance views and objects appear closer to the user.