Accession No
0626
Brief Description
reflecting telescope, Gregorian; by Claude Simeon Passemant, circa 1755
Origin
au Louvre; Paris; France
Maker
Passemant. Claude Simeon
Class
astronomy; optical
Earliest Date
1755
Latest Date
1755
Inscription Date
Material
metal (brass, speculum metal); hide (leather); wood; glass
Dimensions
telescope length 230mm; length of barrel 179mm; diameter 52mm; base diameter 59mm; height 146mm; diameter of objective 40mm
Special Collection
Robert Whipple collection
Provenance
Purchased by Robert Stewart Whipple from J.G. Dubreuil in Paris, France, in 11/1930.
Inscription
‘Passemant ingénieur du Roi au Louvre AParis’ (on eye end)
Description Notes
Brass Gregorian telescope, leather covered barrel, ball and socket joint with screw, Brass pillar stand set in turned wooden base. Secondary mirror (speculum metal) with focusing by milled ring around barrel. Push-fir brass cover. Ring screws into eye end and holds speculum metal primary mirror by spring. 4-lens eyepiece screws into this ring and has screw on cover. Telescope mounted on ball and socket joint on pillar, with clamping screw.
Condition fair (leather very cracked on underside)
References
Events
Description
Isaac Newton built the first reflecting telescope in 1669. Unlike a refracting telescope a reflecting telescope uses concave mirrors to focus light. The great advantage of using mirrors is that all colours of light are reflected equally. This was an improvement on the refracting telescope which used lenses to focus light. Here the light refracted at different angles to create a distorting fringe of colour around the image being observed.
At first high quality reflecting telescopes were difficult to make as the mirrors available to use degraded quickly and were unable to transmit enough light. But by the eighteenth century methods of making mirrors had improved and instrument makers such as James Short had created hundreds of reflecting telescopes for sale.
There are three types of reflecting telescope: the Gregorian, the Cassegrain and the Newtonian. Both the Gregorian and Cassegrain telescopes are pointed directly at the object being viewed. But the Newtonian has a secondary mirror set at 45° to the objective so the observer stands at right angles to the telescope. Today modern telescopes (with apertures greater than one metre) are reflecting telescopes. Various innovations make them more powerful and accurate. Computer controlled deformable mirrors can correct against changes due to atmospheric conditions or faults in the material.
Created by: Jenny Downes
FM:40130
Images (Click to view full size):