Page:Popular Astronomy - Airy - 1881.djvu/33

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LECTURE I.
19

as if the stars and the bars were at the same distance from the eye. These bars are in reality fine cobweb threads, or something of the kind, fixed in the telescope very near to the eye. Perhaps Figure 7

Fig. 7.

may serve to illustrate the construction of the telescope. There is no tube, but that is immaterial. At A is what we call a lens, that is to say, a piece of glass convex on both sides, and therefore thickest in the middle. It is here supposed to be fixed in a hole in a wooden screen MN. The property of this lens of glass is, if there be a luminous object in the distance, it collects all the light from that object; and instead of suffering it to go out in a broad sheet of light, it makes it contract so that the light from each point in the object is collected at a corresponding point on the screen; and therefore all the corresponding points of light on the screen, which belong to the original points of light in the original luminous appearance, when put together, form an image which is exactly similar to the original object. The image, however, is turned upside down, because the light which comes from the upper part of the luminous object and goes through the lens, passes downwards towards the lower part of the screen KL.

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