Accession No

1828


Brief Description

refracting telescope, seven-draw, English, circa 1700


Origin

England


Maker


Class

astronomy; optical


Earliest Date

1700


Latest Date

1700


Inscription Date


Material

hide (vellum); paper (pasteboard); wood; glass; metal (brass)


Dimensions

length 550 mm; diameter 70 mm


Special Collection

Heywood collection


Provenance

Purchased from the Professor Harold Heywood collection under estate duty exemption benefit with the assistance of a Science Museum grant-in-aid.


Inscription


Description Notes

refracting telescope, seven-draw, English, circa 1700.

Reverse taper, hand-held seven-draw refractor, vellum-covered pasteboard body, decorated with orange and green mottlings and gold tooling. Turned wooden mounts for lenses (secured by brass clips), screw-on wooden OG cover and screw-on wooden adaptor (broken into two halves) with screw-in eye-stop. Astronomical telescope (inverting). 7 cream vellum-covered pasteboard draw tubes, bound with coloured vellum at ends.


References


Events

Description
The refracting telescope uses a lens to focus the observed image. Its exact origin is disputed, but it first appeared among Dutch spectacle makers at the beginning of the seventeenth century.

Great discoveries were made using the refracting telescope. Galileo’s work Siderius Nuncius (The Starry Messenger, 1610) describes his discoveries of the mountains on the moon, new stars and the moons of Jupiter.

Galileo’s telescopes consisted of a concave and a convex lens which gave an upright image of low magnification. The Keplerian telescope, which was the main type used in astronomy before the invention of the reflecting telescope, has two convex lenses, which gave an upside-down image with a wider field of view. It can be modified for use on land by adding an extra eyepiece lens, which gives an upright image.

The main problem with refracting telescopes is that they suffer from chromatic aberration. When light travels through an ordinary lens each colour is bent through a different angle. A spectrum of colours would appear around the image being viewed.

An improvement to the quality of telescopic images came in 1758, when John Dollond started manufacturing a special lens made of two different sorts of glass. This reduced chromatic aberration by bringing two particular wavelengths of light into a common focus. Achromatic lenses and improvements in glass-making made both small and large refracting telescopes popular in the nineteenth century. Refracting telescopes are still in use today but are usually small telescopes designed for amateur users.


Created by: Jenny Downes


FM:42445

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