BEING able to reach for the stars has been made a lot easier thanks to the telescope – which allows us to see them all up close.
The telescope has seen a lot of developments since it was first invented over 400 years ago. But who invented the telescope, and why?
Hans Lippershey, a Dutch eyeglass maker, made the first widely distributed telescope, and applied for the first telescope patent in 1608.
Lots of inventors were working on similar designs around the same time, but Lippershey made an important observation.
He discovered that reducing the light in the telescope and focusing it meant he could see images even further away.
His original telescope could magnify up to three times.
Lippershey first showed his telescope to Prince Maurice of Nassau in September 1608.
But he was denied the patent he applied for on October 2, 1608, because other scientists and glass makers came forward with similar devices.
Another Dutch man, Jacob Metius, presented his own telescope a few weeks after Lippershey – but was also denied a patent, because of Lippershey’s application.
And Zacharias Janssen, also a Dutch eyeglass maker, was another contemporary working on his own version of the telescope.
Janssen was once claimed to have got their first – but this has since been proved to be inaccurate.
Today, Lippershey generally gets credit for inventing the telescope, while Janssen is credited with creating the upright compound microscope.
Lippershey was given a government contract for the use of his design, and telescopes could be found all over Europe within six months.
Astronomer Galileo Galilei made significant modifications to Lippershey’s telescope, before making his observations of space.
Galileo’s final version could magnify up to 30 times.
The word telescope comes from the Italian “telescopio”, which first appeared early in the 1600s, and first appeared in English in 1650.
Telescopes were invented because of natural developments in the technology and science of magnifying lenses, and a desire to see and understand the cosmos.
Lenses for glasses existed as early as the 1400s but were not of sufficient quality for use in astronomy.
These had improved significantly by the 1600s, and glasses makers were able to polish and refine the lenses.
Lippershey made glasses in the Netherlands, and he and many others were investigating the power and potential of lenses.
At the same time, the Renaissance – a period of cultural, artistic and economic “rebirth” in Europe – was fuelling an interest in understanding and seeing other space objects.
The telescope was used to prove Copernicus’ theory that the Sun was at the centre of the universe.
It also enabled the first sightings of Jupiter’s moons, and the first observations of objects orbiting others.
Galileo was first credited with these observations, but he was not the only one to gaze at the stars.
Galileo did not necessarily get there first, but he published his findings and had them distributed widely.
A Brit, Thomas Harriot, also designed a telescope, and he made more accurate observations and sketches of the moon than Galileo – but he did not publicise his work the way Galileo did.
German astronomer Simon Marius made more accurate observations of Jupiter’s moons than Galileo.
He was passed off as a faker when he tried to claim this in his lifetime, but he is widely believed now.
And another German astronomer, Christoph Scheiner, observed independently from Galileo that the Sun was not a perfect sphere, and noticed sun spots.
And another important observation made with the first telescopes was that the moon is not round, and has mountains and craters.
Previously the moon was thought to be like a pearl, or a translucent sphere.
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This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk
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