Telescopes come in different types, some in tubes and some
in struts and wrappers. Struts and wrappers come apart and pack in little spaces, and therefore win in transportation. But
tubes win out in viewing because they’re dark inside with thermal insulation.
But the tubes are harder to get around. The tube of our old twenty-four incher (Delphinium)
is thirty inches in diameter and twelve feet long, and it doesn’t pack in little spaces. (But it sleeps two, end to
end, and you can’t roll out of bed.) And although it’s hard to get it around, the tube makes it easy to set up
the telescope. The box goes in the rocker, and the tube goes in the box. Struts take longer to put together (some assembly
required), but they have the big advantage in making it easy to get the telescopes out for public use. And, after all, that’s
what matters.
But the struts require wrappers, or shrouds, to keep out the turbulence of the air
near the ground, and to keep out stray light. And therein lies a problem. Most shrouded telescopes wipe out to their shrouds
because of thermal conductivity. The upper surfaces of the shrouds cool off by exchanging infrared radiation with the night
sky, while the bellies or lower surfaces, stay warm by exchanging infrared radiation with the ground. Then, if the wrappers
or shrouds are not thermally opaque, they transfer these temperatures to the air column inside and seriously disturb the viewing.
It
is a usual thing at star parties, even on good nights when the
atmospheric turbulence is low, to see oversized star images in these shrouded telescopes. And when you throw the eyepiece
out of focus, you can see the eddies of the cold air coming down from the ceiling and the warm air coming up from the floor.
This internal turbulence can be largely controlled by wrapping the shroud in some lightweight, thermally insulating, wrapper
like a Space Blanket. The collar that holds the diagonal, and any light shield beyond it, have the same problem. They should
be thermally opaque.
Years ago in
Alberta, Canada, I was asked to check an eighteen incher f/6 in struts and wrapper, and with a lightweight extra collar beyond
the eyepiece to control stray light. The problem was in the telescope, not in the night sky. One third of the problem was
in the extra collar, and another third was in the shroud. Only one third was in the eyepiece collar and the rest.
In the
sixties the telescopes one saw at the star parties were small, like sheep grazing on the knolls. But now we see eighteen and
twenty-inchers running over the hills like cattle. And most of these larger telescopes are in struts and wrappers. Now these
larger telescopes are much more beset by turbulence problems than are the smaller ones. Because if you consider the large
aperture as made up of many smaller apertures, you can see two things. First, the effect of the turbulence on the smaller
apertures is twofold. It blurs them a little, and it makes them dance. And second, in the image from the full aperture, they
dance out of step. It is this dancing out of step that blurs the image in these larger telescopes. And that is why it is so
important that the shrouds and the collars on the larger telescopes with struts and wrappers should be thermally opaque.
And that
is also why, when the atmospheric turbulence is obstructive, we use aperture masks on our larger telescopes to give us unobstructed
reflectors with smaller apertures and longer focal ratios.