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![]() The world's largest telescope today is of course the twin Keck telescopes, even taken one by one. And before that, the largest scope was the Russian 6-meter reflector. And before that the Hale 5-meter telescope, and before that the Hooker 2.5-meter telescope. But before that? I'd like to assemble a list of the world's largest telescopes, in chronological order. Ideally it should cover all the time from Galileo's telescope in 1609 to the present time, and be complete, but quite naturally available information may be incomplete or inaccurate particularly from the 1600's and 1700's. Currently, the list looks as below. By a curious coincidence Lord Rosse's 72-inch Leviathan was dismantled in 1908, the same year that Mount Wilson's 60-inch reflector became operational; since the latter happened on 20 Dec 1908, Lord Rosse's Leviathan was most likely dismantled before that date. Thus, there ought to be some time (several months?) during 1908 when neither the Leviathan nor Mt Wilson's 60-inch was the world's largest telescope. But I don't know which other telescope was the largest immediately before Mt Wilson's 60-inch. Anybody got an idea? I also have a lot of gaps in my list before 1783, when William Herschel finished his 20 foot f.l. (0.43 meter aperture) reflector, so any information there is welcome. I'm also not sure whether Herchel's 40-foot reflector remained operational all the time until 1845 (a few decades after Herschel's death in 1822); if not, there's another gap there which needs to be filled. Note that the size of scopes were usually given as the focal length in feet; not until the Leviathan the aperture was given as the "size" instead. Thus, both Lord Rosse's Leviathan and Galileo Galilei's scope were 6 foot scopes.... :-) Anyway, here's my list. Comments, additions and corrections are welcome! ================================================== ============ World's largest Aperture Scope scope in 1609 0.044 m Galileos 5-6 foot f.l. refractor, x33 1640 ca ? 15-20 foot refractors 1656 0.07 m Christian Huygens 23 f.l. foot refractor, x100 1670 ca ? Hevelius 140 foot f.l. refractor 1675 (The "air telescope") 1730 ca (Large reflectors) 1774 (William Herschel starts making telescopes) 1783-1789 0.43 m William Herschel's 20 foot f.l. reflector, Bath, England 1789-1845 1.22 m William Herschel's 40 foot f.l. reflector, Bath, England 1845-1908 1.83 m Lord Rosse's Leviathan, 6 foot ap., Birr Castle, Ireland; dismantled 1908 1908 ?????? ?????????? (some other scope - which?) 1908-1917 1.5 m 60-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA; operational 20 Dec 1917-1948 2.5 m Hooker 100-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA 1948-1974 5.0 m Hale 200-inch, Mt Palomar, California, USA 1974-1990 6.0 m Bolshoi, Nizhny Arkhyz, Russia 1990- 10.0 m Keck, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, USA ================================================== ============ -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://www.stjarnhimlen.se/ http://home.tiscali.se/pausch/ |
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Paul Schlyter wrote:
The world's largest telescope today is of course the twin Keck telescopes, even taken one by one. And before that, the largest scope was the Russian 6-meter reflector. And before that the Hale 5-meter telescope, and before that the Hooker 2.5-meter telescope. But before that? I'd like to assemble a list of the world's largest telescopes, in chronological order. Ideally it should cover all the time from Galileo's telescope in 1609 to the present time, and be complete, but quite naturally available information may be incomplete or inaccurate particularly from the 1600's and 1700's. Currently, the list looks as below. ... I think you should include the Lick observatory 36-inch refractor, who was followed shortly by the Yerkes scope as biggest in the world. - Alex |
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Paul Schlyter wrote:
1908-1917 1.5 m 60-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA; operational 20 Dec 1917-1948 2.5 m Hooker 100-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA I recall reading that the Hooker 100-inch didn't reach operation until 1918. Hence there was a few-month window when the 72-inch reflector at the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, held the title as the largest operating telescope in the world. -- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Mark Gingrich San Leandro, California |
#4
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On Tue, 30 Sep 2003 21:58:29 +0200, Paul Schlyter
wrote: The world's largest telescope today is of course the twin Keck telescopes, even taken one by one. And before that, the largest scope was the Russian 6-meter reflector. And before that the Hale 5-meter telescope, and before that the Hooker 2.5-meter telescope. But before that? I'd like to assemble a list of the world's largest telescopes, in chronological order. Ideally it should cover all the time from Galileo's telescope in 1609 to the present time, and be complete, but quite naturally available information may be incomplete or inaccurate particularly from the 1600's and 1700's. Paul- Fun project. I assume your interest here is in _astronomical_ telescopes? I only ask this because I doubt that Galileo's telescope was the largest telescope in the world at the time, although it was certainly the first that we know to have been used as a truly astronomical instrument. This raises the interesting question of whether there have been any non-astronomical telescopes since that time that were actually the largest telescopes in the world. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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Mark Gingrich wrote:
Paul Schlyter wrote: 1908-1917 1.5 m 60-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA; operational 20 Dec 1917-1948 2.5 m Hooker 100-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA I recall reading that the Hooker 100-inch didn't reach operation until 1918. Hence there was a few-month window when the 72-inch reflector at the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, held the title as the largest operating telescope in the world. The Hooker had some problems after seeing first light on November 1, 1917. Whether or not it was "operational" depends on one's definition of the term. The Hooker did work from the beginning but was still being tuned up for a while. Hale wrote in his Annual Report of the Director at the end of 1917 that the Hooker was "not in commission" so the claim that it "didn't reach operation until 1918" above is correct (although first light was only two months before Jan 1, 1918). When did the 72-inch go into operation? If early in the year it should surely get to claim the title of World's Largest for at least a short time. From "Building the 100-inch Telescope" on the Mount Wilson Observatory web site at http://www.mtwilson.edu/his/art/g1a4.htm: "The telescope was not without some problems, but they were all readily solved. The removable sections of the telescope tube that support the secondary mirrors were not rigid enough, so compression rings were added around them. The large, movable observing platform had to be partially reconstructed. The clock drive had a periodic error that was traced to the springing of a shaft in the drive train. An additional bearing solved this problem. The optics and the spectrograph, the telescope's primary research tool, performed up to the highest expectations. In comparisons of plates taken with the 60- and 100-inch telescopes, some of them exposed simultaneously with identical equipment on the telescopes, the full theoretical gain of the larger instrument was attained. The 100-inch not only worked, but it would be as powerful a research instrument as anyone could have hoped." Mike Simmons |
#6
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Paul Schlyter wrote:
I'd like to assemble a list of the world's largest telescopes, in chronological order. I've always been fascinated by this and hoped that someone would put such a list together. There was a great article in Sky and Telescope a few years ago that should help but I can't locate it. It had a list of all of the world's largest telescopes of various designs and included their commissioning dates. The section on refractors should prove useful as that's where the older instruments are. Currently, the list looks as below. By a curious coincidence Lord Rosse's 72-inch Leviathan was dismantled in 1908, the same year that Mount Wilson's 60-inch reflector became operational; since the latter happened on 20 Dec 1908, Lord Rosse's Leviathan was most likely dismantled before that date. Thus, there ought to be some time (several months?) during 1908 when neither the Leviathan nor Mt Wilson's 60-inch was the world's largest telescope. But I don't know which other telescope was the largest immediately before Mt Wilson's 60-inch. Anybody got an idea? Probably the Yerkes 40-inch refractor. If one discounts large speculum metal mirrors then this is certainly the case. 1917-1948 2.5 m Hooker 100-inch, Mt Wilson, California, USA November 1, 1917 was first light. As has been noted elsewhere, it was not used for research until 1918. 1948-1974 5.0 m Hale 200-inch, Mt Palomar, California, USA The correct location name is "Palomar Mountain". As with the Sky and Telescope article, it would be interesting to separate telescopes by design as well. The 40-inch refractor remains the world's largest of its kind despite being well over a century old. Surely that deserves some special recognition! :-) Mike Simmons |
#7
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In article ,
Chris L Peterson wrote: Fun project. I assume your interest here is in _astronomical_ telescopes? I only ask this because I doubt that Galileo's telescope was the largest telescope in the world at the time, although it was certainly the first that we know to have been used as a truly astronomical instrument. This raises the interesting question of whether there have been any non-astronomical telescopes since that time that were actually the largest telescopes in the world. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com Chris, I remember a very interesting article in Sky & Tel several years ago. It was about a lens or mirror, touted as the world's largest, that was displayed or possibly even mounted at about the turn of the 19th century. Either a World's Fair or possibly the Colombian Exposition? Anyone recall the details?? Starry Skies, Rich |
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Richard DeLuca wrote:
In article , Chris L Peterson wrote: Fun project. I assume your interest here is in _astronomical_ telescopes? I only ask this because I doubt that Galileo's telescope was the largest telescope in the world at the time, although it was certainly the first that we know to have been used as a truly astronomical instrument. This raises the interesting question of whether there have been any non-astronomical telescopes since that time that were actually the largest telescopes in the world. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com Chris, I remember a very interesting article in Sky & Tel several years ago. It was about a lens or mirror, touted as the world's largest, that was displayed or possibly even mounted at about the turn of the 19th century. Either a World's Fair or possibly the Colombian Exposition? Anyone recall the details?? Starry Skies, Rich The mounting and tube for the Yerkes 40-inch refractor were on display at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. Could that be what you were thinking of? Mike Simmons |
#9
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In article
, Richard DeLuca wrote: It was about a lens or mirror, touted as the world's largest, that was displayed or possibly even mounted at about the turn of the 19th century. Excuse me- I meant the beginning of the 19th century here sigh. |
#10
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In article
, Richard DeLuca wrote: Excuse me- I meant the beginning of the 19th century here sigh. ARRGH!! 20th Century. Gonna take a nap now........ ![]() |
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