Primary Mirror

A primary mirror is a form of distributed data management on the Internet.
A primary mirror (or primary) is the principal light-gathering surface of a reflective telescope. For most of astronomy's history, primary mirrors used to be monolithic blocks of glass or other material, curved to exact shapes and coated with a reflective layer. This worked well, but as telescope diameters began to increase, the primary mirror became also the primary limitation on the telescope size: the mirror had to sustain its own weight and not deform under gravity. The limit was soon reached with the 5-meter Mount Palomar observatory and a 6-meter in the USSR. For decades, telescope sizes did not increase significantly. Then, some new technologies were introduced: starting with the MMT, primary mirrors were constructed from small segments, merged (by physical contact or later by optics) into one large primary mirror. While the MMT was a 4.5-meter, the Keck telescopes used a 10-meter segmented mirror, and many others are in development. Secondly, a thin mirror technology was used together with active optics: a very thin mirror (in the order of centimeters) is suspended by actuators in its optimal shape, against the force of gravity. This allows large non-segmented mirrors. This technique is used on the VLT and LBT, and in many other operating or planned telescopes.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
paraphilia
pediatrics
principle of least astonishment
purgatory
physiology
pluto
pi
postmodernism
photography
pop
postmodern philosophy
postmodern music
protocol
pump
progressive
pressure
pound force per square inch
polygon
player character
parish
procopius
property
police
pdp 10
pdp 20
pdp
platonism
list of physicists
protein
physical chemistry
perimeter
phase (matter)
physical science
pentose
propane
pan
precambrian
plasma
polymerase chain reaction
polymerase
pacific scandal
primer
purine
pyrimidine