Benutzer:Elrond/List of largest optical refracting telescopes

Dies ist die Liste der größten Linsenteleskope (Refraktoren) nach Linsendurchmesser und Brennweite sortiert.

Das grüßte praktisch nutzbare Linsenteleskop der Welt ist das Yerkes Observatory mit 102 cm (40 inch) Linsendurchmesser. Es wurde für mehr als ein Jahrhundert zu astronomischen Beobachtungen genutzt.

Die meisten der klassischen Großrefraktoren nutzen ein achromatisches Dublet mit einer parallaktischen (äquatorialen) Montierung. Das größte jemals gebaute Linsenteleskop war das Grande lunette de l'exposition universelle de Paris 1900, das 1900 für die pariser Weltausstellung 1900 und nach Beendigung der Ausstellung wieder demontiert wurde. Es hatte einen Linsendurchmesser von 125 cm und wurde von einem 2 m durchmessenden Spiegel eines Heliostaten mit Licht versorgt, war aber unbeweglich horizontal montiert.

Name/ObservatoryLocation at
debut
Modern location name or fateLens diameterFocal lengthBuiltCommentsImage
Yerkes Observatory[1]Williams Bay, Wisconsin, USA-102 cm (40″)19.4 m (62′)1897Largest in current operation.[2]
Great Paris Exhibition Telescope of 1900Paris 1900 ExpositionDismantled 1900125 cm (49.21")57 m (187 feet)1900Fixed lens, scrapped. Aimed via a 2m reflecting siderostat
Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope,
ORM
La Palma,
Spain
-98 cm (39.37")15 m2002Single element non-achromatic objective[3] combined with reflective Adaptive optics and a Schupmann corrector.
James Lick telescope
Lick Observatory
Mount Hamilton, California, USA-91 cm (36″)17.6 m1888 
Grande Lunette
Paris Observatory
Meudon, France-83 cm + 62 cm (32.67" + 24.40")16.2 m1891Double telescope
Großer Refraktor
Astrophysical Observatory Potsdam
Potsdam, Deutsches KaiserreichPotsdam, Germany80 cm + 50 cm (31.5"+19.5")12.0 m1899Double telescope
Grande Lunette
Nice Observatory
Nice, Francesince 1988 Côte d'Azur Observatory77 cm (30.3″) [4][5]17.9 m1886Bischoffscheim funded
William Thaw Telescope
Allegheny Observatory, University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA-76 cm (30″)14.1 m1914Brashear made, photographic[6]
Pulkovo observatorySaint Petersburg, Russian EmpireDestroyed76 cm (30″)12.8 m (42 feet)1885Destroyed during WWII, only lens (made by Alvan Clark & Sons) survives.
28-inch Grubb Refractor
Royal Greenwich Observatory
Greenwich, London, Great Britain-71 cm (28″)8.5 m1894
Großer Refraktor
Vienna Observatory
Vienna, Austrian EmpireVienna, Austria69 cm (27" )10.5 m1880Largest refractor in 1880 [7]
Great Treptow Refractor
Treptow Observatory
Berlin, Germany-68 cm (26.77")21 m1896renamed Archenhold Observatory 1946
Leander McCormick ObservatoryCharlottesville, Virginia, USA-66 cm (26" )9.9 m1884completed c. 1874, installed 1884
U.S. Naval ObservatoryFoggy Bottom Washington, DC, USAmoved to Northwest, Washington, D.C., 189366 cm (26")9.9 m1873Largest refractor in 1873. Alvan Clark & Sons mounting replaced with Warner & Swasey mounting in 1893.
Royal Greenwich ObservatoryHerstmonceux, Great Britain-66 cm (26")6.82 m1896 
Yale-Columbia Refractor
Yale Southern Station
Johannesburg, Union of South AfricaRelocated 195266 cm (26")10.8 m1925–1952Yale-Columbia Refractor moved to Mount Stromlo Observatory in 1952, same telescope as following entry.
Yale-Columbia Refractor
Mount Stromlo Observatory
Mount Stromlo, AustraliaDestroyed 200366 cm (26")10.8 m1952Yale-Columbia Refractor - Previously located in South Africa. Relocated to Australia in 1952. Destroyed by bush fire on January 18, 2003.[8]
65 cm Zeiss Refractor, Pulkovo observatoryGermany[9]Saint Petersburg, Russia65 cm (25.59″)10.413 m1954War reparation from Germany[9] In Pulkovo since 1954.
Llano del Hato National Astronomical ObservatoryLlano del Hato, Venezuela-65 cm (25.6″)10.5 m1955
Belgrade Observatory [10]Belgrade, Kingdom of SerbiaBelgrade, Serbia65 cm (25.6″)10.55 m1932 Zeiss made lens, same as at Berlin Observatory
Hida ObservatoryGifu, Japan-65 cm (25.6″)10.50 m1972
Observatory History Museum Mitaka 65 cmMitaka, Tokyo, Japan-65 cm (25.6″)1929Carl Zeiss Jena
Berlin-Babelsberg Observatory
Berliner Sternwarte Babelsberg
Berlin, Germany65 cm (26 in)10.12 m (33 ft)1914Berlin Observatory just moved to Potsdam-Babelsberg in 1913; Zeiss lens
Newall Refractor
National Observatory of Athens
UKAthens, Greece since 195762.5 cm (24.5″)8.86 m (29 ft)1869Built by Thomas Cooke for Robert Stirling Newall. First located at his estate; donated and relocated to Cambridge Observatory in 1889; donated to Athens Observatory and relocated to Mt. Penteli in Greece in 1957. Currently used only for educational purposes as part of the visitor center.
Lowell ObservatoryArizona, USA-61 cm (24″)9.75 m (32 ft)1894Alvan Clark & Sons telescope
Sproul ObservatoryPennsylvania, USA-61 cm (24″)11.0 m (36 ft)1911
Craig telescopeWandsworth Common, LondonDismantled 185761 cm (24″)24.5 m (80 feet)1852Problem with lens figuring [11]
Grubb Parsons Double RefractorSaltsjöbaden, Sweden-60 + 50 cm
(23.6″ + 19.7")
8.0 m1930Stockholms Observatory in Saltsjöbaden
Radcliffe Double Refractor
University of London Observatory
Oxford, UKMill Hill, London60 + 45 cm
(23.6″ + 18")
7.0 m1901Obtained from the Radcliffe Observatory and installed at ULO in 1938
Zeiss Double Refractor
Bosscha Observatory
Bandung, Dutch East IndiesBandung, Indonesia60 cm (23.6″)10.7 m1928
Der Große Refraktor (Great Refractor)
Hamburg Observatory
Bergedorf, Germany-60 cm (23.6″)9 m1911
Halstead ObservatoryPrinceton, USARoper Mountain Science Center,[12] Greenville, SC58.4 cm (23″)9.8 m (32 ft)1881by Alvan Clark & Sons
Chamberlin ObservatoryColorado, USA-50 cm (20″)8.5 m (28 ft)1891First Light 1894
Van Vleck ObservatoryConnecticut, USA-50 cm (20″)8.4 m (27.5 ft)1922
Chabot ObservatoryOakland, California, USA (2000)50 cm (20″)8.5 m (28 ft)1914"Rachael" Warner & Swazey Company (Optics John A Brashear Company) Refurb in 2000 and moved to present location.
Carnegie Double Astrograph
Lick Observatory
Mount Hamilton, California, USAnot in service
threatened with removal
50 cm (20″)4.67 m (14 ft)1941F7.4
Imperial ObservatoryStraßburg, German EmpireStrasbourg, France48.5 cm (19.1″)7 m (23 ft)1880 [13]Then largest in German Empire
18½-in Dearborn Observatory RefractorChicago, USAEvanston, USA47 cm (18.5″)1862by Alvan Clark & Sons
Wilder ObservatoryAmherst College, Amherst, MA, USA-46 cm (18″)(25 ft)1903by Alvan Clark & Sons
Flower ObservatoryPhiladelphia, USA-46 cm (18″)6.7 m (22.6 ft)1896
Royal ObservatoryCape Colony, British EmpireSouth Africa46 cm (18″)6.7 m (22.6 ft)1897[14]
Luneta 46
Observatório Nacional
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil-46 cm (18,4″)9,7 m1921T. Cooke & Sons[15][16]
Gran Ecuatorial Gautier Telescope
La Plata Astronomical Observatory
La Plata, Argentina-43.3 cm (17″)9,7 m1894Gautier
Brashear Refractor, Goodsell ObservatoryNorthfield, Minnesota, USA-41.15 cm (16.2″)1890by John Brashear
Herget Telescope
Cincinnati Observatory
Cincinnati, Ohio-40.64 cm (16″)1904by Alvan Clark & Sons
Dorides Refractor [17]
National Observatory of Athens
Athens, GreeceAthens, Greece40 cm (16″)5,08 m1901by Gautier [18]
Washburn ObservatoryMadison, Wisconsin, USA-39.5 cm (15.56″)6.7 m (22.6 ft)1881by Alvan Clark & Sons
Harvard Great Refractor
Harvard College Observatory [19]
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA-38 cm (15″)1847largest telescope in America for 20 years [20]
Gran Ecuatorial Observatorio Astronómico NacionalTacubaya, México-38 cm (15")4.8 m1885by Howard Grubb
Lunette Arago
Paris Observatory
Paris, France-38 cm (15")9 m1883by Gautier and Henry brothers
Telescopio Amici
Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri
Florence, Italy-36 cm5 m187228 cm lens by G. B. Amici substituted by Zeiss lens in 1926. Currently used only for educational purposes.
Photographic Refractor
Leiden Observatory
Leiden, Netherlands-34 cm + 15  cm (13.4″ + 5.9")524 cm1897Double telescope
by Gautier and Henry brothers
Dominion Observatory Refractor
Dominion Observatory
Ottawa, CanadaMoved to Helen Sawyer-Hogg Observatory (Canada Science and Technology Museum, Ottawa) in 1974 [21]38.1 cm (15″)571.5 cm1905Original achromat doublet by John Brashear replaced with apochomat triplet by Perkin-Elmer in 1958. Currently used for education and outreach.
Fitz-Clark Refractor
Allegheny Observatory, University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA-32.02 cm (13")4.621861Fitz made, visual/photographic. In 1895 Established that Saturn's Rings to be made up of particles and not solid.[6]
H. Fitz-H.G. Fitz Refractor
Henry Ruthurfurd, Private Observatroy
New York City, USA-32.02 cm (13")4.621864Fitz made, visual/photographic. Started by Henry, finished by son Henry Giles[[]]
Bamberg Refractor
Urania Observatory (Berlin)
Berlin-Moabit, PrussiaBerlin, Germany31.4 cm (12.36")5 m1889then biggest in Prussia, moved to Insulaner Wilhelm-Foerster Observatory in 1963 [22]
Grubb refractor,

Keele Observatory

Oxford, EnglandKeele University, England (since 1962),

in use for the public

31.0 cm

(12.25")

4.39 m1874Still awaiting the reunion with its 19th-century camera used in the Carte du Ciel project and to prove Einstein's general relativity theory during the 1919 solar eclipse.
Ladd Observatory,
Brown University
Providence, Rhode Island, USAStill in use for instruction and public education30 cm (12″) Vorlage:Convert4.57 m (15 ft)1891Lens designed by Charles S. Hastings and made by John Brashear; telescope mount by George N. Saegmuller
Irving Porter Church Memorial Telescope
Fuertes Observatory
Ithaca, New YorkStill used for instruction and public outreach.30 cm (12″)4.57 m (15 ft)1922Optics by John Brashear, mounting by Warner & Swasey.
Silesian Planetarium and Astronomical ObservatoryKatowice/Chorzów, Silesia, Poland30 cm (12")[23]4.5 m1955Largest and oldest Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory in Poland.[24] The 3rd largest in Eastern Europe (east of Germany), after Pulkovo Observatory in Saint Petersburg, Russia and Belgrade Observatory in Belgrade, Serbia
Urania Sternwarte (Zurich)Zurich, Switzerland-30 cm (12″)5.05 m1907by Fraunhofer and Zeiss
University of Illinois ObservatoryUrbana, Illinois, USA-30 cm (12″)1896by John Brashear, National Historic Landmark, still used for instruction
Jewett ObservatoryPullman, Washington, USAUsed for instruction and pleasure30 cm (12")4.57 m (15')Assembled from older parts 1953 [25]Alvan Clark & Sons
Mitchell Telescope
Cincinnati Observatory
Cincinnati, Ohio, USA-28 cm (11″)1843Merz & Mahler; Oldest professional telescope still used weekly by the public[26]
Brashear Refractor
Nicholas E. Wagman Observatory
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA-28 cm (11″)1910John Brashear, Amateur Astronomers Association of Pittsburgh [27] ll
Repsold Refractor (10-duims)
Leiden Observatory
Leiden, Netherlands-26.6 cm (10.5″)399,5 cm1885Repsold and Sons, optics by Alvan Clark & Sons
Mills ObservatoryDundee, Scotland (1951)25 cm (10″) 1871by T. Cooke & Sons. Training telescope at St. Andrews 1938-1951
Coats ObservatoryPaisley, Scotland (1898)25 cm (10″) 1898by Howard Grubb. Replaced 5" refractor by Thomas Cooke, installed in 1883.]].
Quito Astronomical ObservatoryQuitoLa Alameda park24 cm1875An operational 1875 Merz Telescopes and one of the Oldest Observatories in South America, founded in 1873.
Fraunhofer-Refraktor
Berlin Observatory
Berlin-Kreuzberg, Deutsches KaiserreichMoved 1913 to Munich, Germany24 cm (9.6″)4 m (13.4′)1835Used to discover Neptune; in Deutsches Museum, München since 1913[28]
Hume Cronyn Memorial Observatory
Named in memory of Hume Blake Cronyn
University of Western Ontario
London, Ontario, Canada
-25.4 cm (10″)4.37 m (172")1940Built by Perkin Elmer Corp.
Second largest refractor in Canada. Continues as Canada's oldest public astronomy venue.
Great Dorpat Refractor (Fraunhofer)
Dorpat/Tartu Observatory
Dorpat, Governorate of LivoniaTartu, Estonia24 cm (9.6″)4 m (13.4′)1824"..the first modern, achromatic, refracting telescope." [29][30]

See also

  • List of largest optical reflecting telescopes
  • List of largest optical telescopes in the 20th century
  • List of largest optical telescopes in the 19th century
  • List of largest optical telescopes in the 18th century

References

Vorlage:Reflist

Further reading


Refracting telescopesCategory:Lists of superlatives