greg1917 Posted May 15, 2003 Posted May 15, 2003 When i looked at a star in the sky, its colour flickered as did its intensity. why does this happen?
JaKiri Posted May 16, 2003 Posted May 16, 2003 Distortions in the atmosphere make it seem like they flicker.
Radical Edward Posted May 16, 2003 Posted May 16, 2003 yeap, this is the main problem with surface telescopes (as well as absorption) and the reason people are developing laser guide stars and adaptive optics. have a google for them, they are quite interesting. THe asme adaptive optics technique can be used for advanced retinal imaging
blike Posted May 16, 2003 Posted May 16, 2003 Yea, I've seen one of those telescopes on discovery that has a computer constantly bending and contorting the mirror to help correct for this. (i think the mirror is actually made up of many smaller mirrors). Nonetheless, its quite amazing.
greg1917 Posted May 16, 2003 Author Posted May 16, 2003 Distortions in the atmosphere? Is that the only reason? I was hoping for something more interesting but if thats the only reason then fair enough.
superchump Posted May 17, 2003 Posted May 17, 2003 Originally posted by greg1917 Distortions in the atmosphere? Is that the only reason? I was hoping for something more interesting but if thats the only reason then fair enough. Nope, just a bunch of different density layers of air and good old refraction. And throw in suspended particulate matter (dust, vapors)
Radical Edward Posted May 17, 2003 Posted May 17, 2003 Originally posted by blike Yea, I've seen one of those telescopes on discovery that has a computer constantly bending and contorting the mirror to help correct for this. (i think the mirror is actually made up of many smaller mirrors). Nonetheless, its quite amazing. It is one very thin flexible mirror with a bunch of actuators behind it - at least the ones I have seen. they may have multiple mirrors for bigger devices though.
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