Galileo built the first telescope in 350BC. He used it to survey the night sky.
how long was the first radio telescope
Galileo used and made the first telescope.
The first electric telescope was not invented by a single individual, but rather it refers to a telescope that is motorized or has electronic features to aid in its operation. The specific inventor or creators of the first electric telescope are not widely credited or known.
Hubble
No. The first telescopes were made by Hans Lippershey and Zacharias Janssen in 1608. Galileo improved their design and made the first astronomical telescope by 1609. In 1611 Kepler improved the telescope further and in 1616 Zucchi designed the first reflecting telescope. The first radio telescope was made by Reber in 1937. So, as you can see the first telescope was made several hundred years before Einstein.
amerigo as prevent the first telescope.
how long was the first radio telescope
Galileo used and made the first telescope.
The first electric telescope was not invented by a single individual, but rather it refers to a telescope that is motorized or has electronic features to aid in its operation. The specific inventor or creators of the first electric telescope are not widely credited or known.
Galileo perfected the telescope.
While not the inventor of the telescope, Galileo is widely believed to be the first person to use a telescope for astronomy.
unfortanently newtan made the first telescope
The telescope was invented first in 1608.
He Built the first relfecting telescope in 1672!!
Yes Sir Isaac Newton had invented the first reflective telescope, as an alternative to the refracting telescope.
Galileo wasn't the first to make a telescope but he discovered the telescope at the age of 46.
James Gregory was 25 when he published the design of the telescope that has come to be named for him, the Gregorian Telescope. He never build one. The first one built was make by Robert Hooke ten years after the design was published, and after Isaac Newton built his Newtonian Telescope. Both were reflecting telescopes.