COLLEGE PHYSICS,V.1-W/ENH.WEBASSIGN
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781305411906
Author: SERWAY
Publisher: CENGAGE L
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Textbook Question
Chapter 25, Problem 10CQ
Large telescopes are usually reflecting rather than refracting. List some reasons for this choice.
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COLLEGE PHYSICS,V.1-W/ENH.WEBASSIGN
Ch. 25.2 - Two campers wish to start a fire during the day....Ch. 25.6 - Suppose you are observing a binary star with a...Ch. 25 - A lens is used to examine an object across a room....Ch. 25 - A CCD camera is equipped with a lens with constant...Ch. 25 - The optic nerve and the brain invert the image...Ch. 25 - Suppose you are observing the interference pattern...Ch. 25 - If you want to examine the fine detail of an...Ch. 25 - Compare and contrast the eye and a camera. What...Ch. 25 - Choose the option from each pair that makes the...Ch. 25 - Choose the option from each pair that makes the...
Ch. 25 - Explain why it is theoretically impossible to see...Ch. 25 - Large telescopes are usually reflecting rather...Ch. 25 - A patient has a near point of 1.25 m. Is she...Ch. 25 - A lens with a certain power is used as a simple...Ch. 25 - Suppose a microscopes resolution is diffraction...Ch. 25 - During LASIK eye surgery (laser-assisted in situ...Ch. 25 - If you increase the aperture diameter of a camera...Ch. 25 - A lens has a focal length of 28 cm and a diameter...Ch. 25 - A certain camera has f-numbers that range from 1.2...Ch. 25 - An f/2.80 CCD camera has a 105-mm focal length...Ch. 25 - A digital camera equipped with an f = 50.0-mm lens...Ch. 25 - A camera is being used with a correct exposure at...Ch. 25 - (a) Use conceptual arguments to show that the...Ch. 25 - A certain type of film requires an exposure time...Ch. 25 - A certain camera lens has a focal length of 175...Ch. 25 - The near point of a persons eye is 60.0 cm. To see...Ch. 25 - A patient cant see objects closer than 40.0 cm and...Ch. 25 - The accommodation limits for Nearsighted Nicks...Ch. 25 - Prob. 12PCh. 25 - An individual is nearsighted; his near point is...Ch. 25 - A particular nearsighted patient cant see objects...Ch. 25 - A particular patients eyes are unable to focus on...Ch. 25 - A patient has a near point of 45.0 cm and far...Ch. 25 - Prob. 17PCh. 25 - Prob. 18PCh. 25 - Prob. 19PCh. 25 - A person sees clearly wearing eyeglasses that have...Ch. 25 - A stamp collector uses a lens with 7.5-cm focal...Ch. 25 - When a drop of water is placed on a flat, clear...Ch. 25 - A biology student uses a simple magnifier to...Ch. 25 - A jewelers lens of focal length 5.0 cm is used as...Ch. 25 - A leaf of length h is positioned 71.0 cm in front...Ch. 25 - (a) What is the maximum angular magnification of...Ch. 25 - The desired overall magnification of a compound...Ch. 25 - Prob. 28PCh. 25 - Prob. 29PCh. 25 - A microscope has an objective lens with a focal...Ch. 25 - The two lenses of a compound microscope are...Ch. 25 - Prob. 32PCh. 25 - Prob. 33PCh. 25 - Prob. 34PCh. 25 - Suppose an astronomical telescope is being...Ch. 25 - Prob. 36PCh. 25 - Prob. 37PCh. 25 - An elderly sailor is shipwrecked on a desert...Ch. 25 - Prob. 39PCh. 25 - Prob. 40PCh. 25 - A converging lens with a diameter of 30.0 cm forms...Ch. 25 - Prob. 42PCh. 25 - Prob. 43PCh. 25 - (a) Calculate the limiting angle of resolution for...Ch. 25 - Prob. 45PCh. 25 - Prob. 46PCh. 25 - Prob. 47PCh. 25 - A spy satellite circles Earth at an altitude of...Ch. 25 - A diffraction grating has a second-order resolving...Ch. 25 - Prob. 50PCh. 25 - Prob. 51PCh. 25 - Monochromatic light is beamed into a Michelson...Ch. 25 - Light of wavelength 550. nm is used to calibrate a...Ch. 25 - Prob. 54PCh. 25 - An interferometer is used to measure the length of...Ch. 25 - The Michelson interferometer can be used to...Ch. 25 - A thin sheet of transparent material has an index...Ch. 25 - Prob. 58APCh. 25 - Prob. 59APCh. 25 - A person with a nearsighted eye has near and far...Ch. 25 - An American standard analog television picture...Ch. 25 - Prob. 62APCh. 25 - The near point of an eye is 75.0 cm. (a) What...Ch. 25 - Prob. 64APCh. 25 - A cataract-impaired lens in an eye may be...Ch. 25 - A laboratory (astronomical) telescope is used to...Ch. 25 - Prob. 67AP
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Why is it advantageous to use a large-diameter objective lens in a telescope? (a) It diffracts the light more effectively than smaller-diameter objective lenses. (b) It increases its magnification. (c) It enables you to see more objects in the field of view. (d) It reflects unwanted wavelengths. (e) It increases its resolution.arrow_forwardWhy is the lens on a good-quality camera coated with a thin film?arrow_forwardWhat is the angular magnification of a telescope that has a 100 cm-focal length objective and a 2.50 cm-focal length eyepiece?arrow_forward
- A large reflecting telescope has an objective mirror with a 10.0-rn radius of curvature. What angular magnification does it produce when a 3.00 m-focal length eyepiece is used?arrow_forwardPeople are often bothered when they discover that reflecting telescopes have a second mirror in the middle to bring the light out to an accessible focus where big instruments can be mounted. “Don’t you lose light?” people ask. Well, yes, you do, but there is no better alternative. You can estimate how much light is lost by such an arrangement. The primary mirror (the one at the bottom in Figure 6.6) of the Gemini North telescope is 8 m in diameter. The secondary mirror at the top is about 1 m in diameter. Use the formula for the area of a circle to estimate what fraction of the light is blocked by the secondary mirror. Figure 6.6 Focus Arrangements for Reflecting Telescopes. Reflecting telescopes have different options for where the light is brought to a focus. With prime focus, light is detected where it comes to a focus after reflecting from the primary mirror. With Newtonian focus, light is reflected by a small secondary mirror off to one side, where it can be detected (see also Figure 6.5). Most large professional telescopes have a Cassegrain focus in which light is reflected by the secondary mirror down through a hole in the primary mirror to an observing station below the telescope.arrow_forwardHow much more light can be gathered by a telescope that is 8 m in diameter than by your fully dark-adapted eye at 7 mm?arrow_forward
- If you build a telescope with a focal length of 1.3 m, what focal length does the eyepiece need to give a magnification of 100 times?arrow_forwardFind the distance between the objective and eyepiece lenses in the telescope in the above problem needed to produce a final image very far from the observer, where vision is most relaxed. Note that a telescope is normally used to view very distant objects.arrow_forwardIn a reflecting telescope the objective is a concave mirror of radius of curvature 2m and an eyepiece is a convex lens of focal length 5 cm. Find the apparent size of a 25-m tree at a distance of 10 km that you would perceive when looking through the telescope.arrow_forward
- What is meant by a negative magnification? What is meant by a magnification whose absolute value is less than one?arrow_forwardThe resolving power of refracting telescope increases with the size of its objective lens. What other advantage is gained with a larger lens?arrow_forwardA 7.5 binocular produces an angular magnification of —7.50, acting like a telescope. (Mirrors are used to make the image upright.) If the binoculars have objective lenses with a 75.0-cm focal length, what is the focal length of the eyepiece lenses?arrow_forward
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