List of largest optical telescopes in the British Isles

List of largest optical telescopes in the British Isles is a list of the largest optical telescopes in the British Isles, including in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

The 28-inch Grubb refractor's dome at Greenwich.
The Six foot telescope in aperture in Ireland, was the largest telescope by aperture for decades.
Discovered as Georgium Sidus, later known as Uranus was one of the famous discoveries made from the British Isles
This metal mirror survived to the 21st century, and is on display at the Science Museum, London.
Former Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux, East Sussex; this was an important site for telescopes in the latter 20th century in England.
Closeup of lower end of a 28-inch aperture telescope
The Leviathan, 1885
The old INT dome

Some of the most famous telescopes would be Herschel's reflector, which he discovered Georgium Sidus, the Leviathan of Parsontown which at 1.8 meters (72 inches) was for decades the largest aperture telescope in the World, and in the 20th century many older telescopes are popular tourist attractions such as at Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London. There is also number of modest instruments at universities used for various astronomical projects or education.

The biggest optical telescope was the Isaac Newton Telescope at Herstmonceux, with a 98 inch mirror (~249 cm); it was there from 1965 to 1980; a lot of astronomy moved to off-site telescopes in space or distant mountains, with data transmitted electronically. The void left for public outreach is filled in part by planetariums and various museum pieces.

The list is not really representative of the largest telescopes of the United Kingdom or Ireland, which by the 20th century were building large telescopes overseas or in the southern hemisphere for better weather or other reasons.

Largest

  • The largest operating telescope is probably with James Gregory Telescope, with 35 inches of aperture used, with an overall design of 37 inches.[1] It is a catadiotropic design that uses reflector and lenses.
  • The largest historically was the 98 inch Isaac Newton Telescope at Herstmonceux (1967-1979)
  • The largest in the 19th century was Ross's Leviathan, a 72 inch ("six-foot") aperture metal mirror telescope
  • In the 18th Century Hershel's Forty foot was probably the biggest by aperture

Examples (aperture)

  • The James Gregory Telescope at University of St Andrews, the Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope has an aperture up 37 inches, operationally is using only 35 inches of aperture.[1]
  • Greenwich 28 inch refractor at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich.[2]
  • Isaac Newton Telescope at Herstmonceux, 98 inches (1965-1979)
  • Leviathan of Parsonstown, 1842- ~1890
  • 3-foot telescope at Parsons
  • RGO telescopes at different points in its history[3]
    • 38-inch Hargreaves Reflector (1960)
    • Yapp 36-inch Reflector (1932)
    • 30-inch Steavenson Reflector (1939)
    • 28-inch Refractor (1893)
    • Thompson Telescope with a 26-inch refractor and 30-inch reflector on one mounting (1896)
    • Lassell 2-foot Reflector (1845)
    • Isaac Roberts 20-inch reflector (1885)
    • Western Equatorial (c.1824)
    • 13-inch Astrographic Refractor (1890)
    • Merz 12.8-inch Visual Refractor (1859-1893) (this was replaced by the 28 inch Grubb in the onion dome)
    • Thomson 9-inch Photographic Refractor (c.1888)
    • Sheepshanks refractor 6.7-inch (1838) (aka Sheepshanks Equatorial)
    • 6-inch Franklin Adams Camera (1898)
    • Shuckburgh telescope a 4.1-inch aperture Refractor (1791)
  • At the Observatory Science Center (at Herstmonceux)[4]
  • Markree Observatory 13.3" Cauchoix (the largest refractor of the early 1830s)
  • A.A. Commons reflectors (later reworked into Crossley and Harvard telescopes)
  • Lassel's reflector, this 24 inch metal mirror telescope was used to discover the moon's Triton and Hyperion.[5]
  • Newton's reflector
  • 40-foot telescope (England)
  • Armagh Observatory 15-inch Grubb reflecting telescope.[6] Specula metal mirror mounted on an equatorial, with clockwork-drive.[6]
  • Bedford Observatory Tully 5.9 inch refractor (8.5 feet focal length); Dollond mount with Sheepshanks clockwork drive.[7]
  • Cambridge Observatory 36 inch (3 foot ~91.44 cm) aperture reflector

Observations

A noted accomplishment of the biggest telescope at the time, Ross's "six foot" leviathan, was the observation of the spiral structure of M51, which was presented at Cambridge in the summer of 1845.[8] Herschel was quite prolific discovering a planet and many moons of the Solar system also with his reflectors.

See also

References

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