Figure 27.28 A 305-m-diameter natural bowl at Arecibo in Puerto Rico is lined with reflective material, making it into a radio telescope. It is the largest curved focusing dish in the world. Although D for Arecibo is much larger than for the Hubble Telescope, it detects much longer wavelength radiation and its diffraction limit is significantly poorer than Hubble's. Arecibo is still very useful, because important information is carried by radio waves that is not carried by visible light. (credit: Tatyana Temirbulatova, Flickr)

University Physics Volume 3
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Author:William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
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Chapter4: Diffraction
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 4.5CYU: Check Your Understanding What is the angular resolution of the Arecibo telescope shown in Figure...
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The 300 x 10^2-m-diameter Arecibo radio telescope pictured in Figure 27.28 detects radio waves with a 4.00 cm average wavelength. What is the angle between two just-resolvable point sources for this telescope?

Figure 27.28 A 305-m-diameter natural bowl at Arecibo in Puerto Rico is lined with reflective material, making it into a radio telescope. It is
the largest curved focusing dish in the world. Although D for Arecibo is much larger than for the Hubble Telescope, it detects much longer
wavelength radiation and its diffraction limit is significantly poorer than Hubble's. Arecibo is still very useful, because important information
is carried by radio waves that is not carried by visible light. (credit: Tatyana Temirbulatova, Flickr)
Transcribed Image Text:Figure 27.28 A 305-m-diameter natural bowl at Arecibo in Puerto Rico is lined with reflective material, making it into a radio telescope. It is the largest curved focusing dish in the world. Although D for Arecibo is much larger than for the Hubble Telescope, it detects much longer wavelength radiation and its diffraction limit is significantly poorer than Hubble's. Arecibo is still very useful, because important information is carried by radio waves that is not carried by visible light. (credit: Tatyana Temirbulatova, Flickr)
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