70 mm. The numbers refer to the diameter of the main lens or mirror; the larger this number, the more light-gathering the telescope is, and also, the higher its resolution will be.
70 mm. The numbers refer to the diameter of the main lens or mirror; the larger this number, the more light-gathering the telescope is, and also, the higher its resolution will be.
70 mm. The numbers refer to the diameter of the main lens or mirror; the larger this number, the more light-gathering the telescope is, and also, the higher its resolution will be.
70 mm. The numbers refer to the diameter of the main lens or mirror; the larger this number, the more light-gathering the telescope is, and also, the higher its resolution will be.
70 mm. The numbers refer to the diameter of the main lens or mirror; the larger this number, the more light-gathering the telescope is, and also, the higher its resolution will be.
Better u ask who found that telescope
The Hubble telescope is in space so it doesn't have a problem with atmospheric distortion. Therefore The Hubble telescope get's a much clearer picture than any normal land telescope which gets a less clear a picture because of water vapour and diffraction of light.
The light-gathering power of a telescope is determined by its aperture, which refers to the width of a telescopes primary mirror or objective lens.
it is a reflector telescope
A Cassegrain reflector
.024-.028 or .60MM-.70MM
The Celestron 21035 Travel Scope 70 is a compact 70mmrefractor telescope optimized for portability.
not much. For a telescope to be useful at 525x power it would have to be 250mm and you would need very good atmospheric conditions (a rarity). A 70mm telescope can be used at about 100x provide it is a high quality one.
there are two different sizes for that year since a split of of months one is a 70mm or a 60mm pulley and one on the bottom 47mm take off timing cover to see and the crankshaft pulley
the 98 ford escort zx2 has a 4 pin maf and 70mm timing belt idler the 00 has a 6 pin maf and 60mm timing idler
70mm = 7cm
70mm is 2.75591"
60mm x 3.1416 = 188.5mm
The YOSCO - much better
Better u ask who found that telescope
it can see further.
70mm is the size of the print. The film is 70mm wide.