Two Simple Telescopes
and Microscopes
The two simplest refractors use two lenses
each. An inverted image is fine for looking at stars, but if
you want an upright image, use the Galilean telescope.
Building an Astronomical Telescope
Use two convex lenses with focal lengths fo
and fe, objective and eyepiece. Ideally
the eyepiece should have a small focal length and objective large, because it
can be shown that the angle magnification is
M = -fo/fe
(Look at the bottom of some object, then the top. Your eyes rotated upward an
angle q . Then repeat, using an inverting telescope and looking at the image
of the object. Your eyes rotated downward (so consider it negative)
angle q '. M is q '/q .)
Make the distance between the lenses fo + fe,
but allow the distance to be adjustable to allow for individual differences in
eyesight.
Building a Galilean Telescope
Use a concave lens for the eyepiece
(negative focal length) and make sure that fo
is greater than the absolute value of fe.
It turns out that the above relationships are valid for this telescope. M=-fo/fe and L=fo+fe
and be sure to use the negative, so L is less than fo.
(Incidentally, the one-way viewers in some
hotel doors are convex-concave combinations. The convex lens is on the inside,
and it magnifies the virtual image of the concave lens a little, but its main
purpose is to prevent the person in the hall from seeing a clear image of
things in the room.)
Turning them into microscopes:
Just lengthen them significantly. Then keep the distance between lenses fixed
and vary the distance from the object to the objective lens to get the best
view of the object. It turns out that the magnification is approximately
M = NL/(fofe),
where N is the "near point" distance, the distance from your eye to a
tiny object when you are trying to see best it without magnification.
Note that since fo
is in the numerator of Mtelescope and in
the denominator of Mmicroscope, a high magnification
telescope turns into a low magnification microscope and vice-versa, other
things being equal. Of course sometimes low magnification is desirable. You may
not be able to see the whole thing at once with too much magnification.
The main pages:
Mechanics
Fluids, heat, electricity and magnetism
Vibrations and waves
Quantum
or alphabetical list of topics, definitions, short discussions: index
Comments, questions: email fredrick.gram @tri-c.edu (remove space before @)