Illustrated Dictionary of Practical AstronomyThe purpose of this book is two-fold. Firstly to provide a handy quick source of ref erence of the terms, techniques, instruments, formulas, processes, etc. , for practising observers, whether it is their first look through someone else's small telescope, or whether they have spent decades building their own instruments, observing with them and are regularly producing results to rival those of the professionals. It is not principally aimed at professional observers, but in order to be sufficiently compre hensive for its intended audience, many entries have been included which will be relevant at that level. In particular though, the more esoteric parts of spectroscopy have not been included. References to specific observatories are included if their instrumentation includes optical telescopes over 1 m in diameter or radio dishes over 20 m. Individual entries for telescopes of 4 m or over are included, and for the larger radio instruments, plus other telescopes that may be of interest for historical or other reasons (for example the 1m Yerkes refractor). Spacecraft have generally not been included (apart from the Hubble space telescope) because their short working lives mean that most current spacecraft will no longer be operating by the time that this book is published. Also the names of spacecraft are frequently changed after launch making it difficult to identify which mission is which. References to commercial organisations, and to some widely available commercial products have been includ ed, but an intending purchaser should always obtain up-to-date information. |
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Common terms and phrases
aberration allows altitude angle antenna aperture arising Astronomical atmospheric atoms axis beam bright camera catalog circle Cluster color components correct cosmic rays declination detected detector device diameter direction distance Earth eclipse effect electrons emulsion energy equation example eyepiece field of view filter focal length focus frequency give given grating Image reproduced intensity known lens light magnitude mean measure mirror Moon motion mounting moved neutrino noise normal object observatory observing obtained operating optical orbital original period photographic photometric system photometry photon planet polar position primary prism produced radiation radio radio telescope range rays reduce reflecting region reproduced by courtesy resolution result rotation scale secondary seen sensitivity separation shape side signal solar space spectroscope spectrum star surface telescope temperature unit usually wave wavelength