Everything about Schmidt Telescope totally explained
A
Schmidt camera, also referred to as the
Schmidt telescope, is an
astronomical camera designed to provide wide
fields of view with limited
aberrations. Other similar designs are the
Wright Camera and
Lurie-Houghton telescope.
Invention and design
The Schmidt camera was invented by
Bernhard Schmidt in
1930(External Link
). Its optical components are an easy-to-make
spherical primary mirror, and an aspherical correcting
lens, known as a
corrector plate, located at the center of curvature of the primary mirror. The film or other detector is placed inside the camera, at the prime focus. The design is noted for allowing very fast
focal ratios, while controlling
coma and
astigmatism.
Schmidt cameras have very strongly curved
focal planes, thus requiring that the film, plate, or other detector be correspondingly curved. In some cases the detector is made curved; in others flat media is mechanically conformed to the shape of the focal plane through the use of retaining clips or bolts, or by the application of a
vacuum. A field flattener, -in its simplest form, a planoconvex lens in direct contact with the film- is sometimes used.
Systems with such lens are called
Schmidt-Väisälä camera.
Applications
The Schmidt camera is typically used as a survey instrument, for research programs in which a large amount of sky must be covered. These include
astronomical surveys,
comet and
asteroid searches, and
nova patrols.
In addition, Schmidt cameras and derivative designs are frequently used for tracking artificial earth
satellites.
Starting in the early
1970s,
Celestron marketed an 8-inch Schmidt Camera. The camera was focused in the factory and was made of materials with low expansion coefficients so it would never need to be focused in the field. Early models required the photographer to cut and develop individual frames of 35mm film as the film holder could only hold one frame of film. About 300 Celestron Schmidt Cameras were produced.
The Schmidt system was popular, used in reverse, for
television projection systems. Large Schmidt projectors were used in theaters but systems as small as 8-inches were made for home use and other small venues.
A Schmidt telescope was at the heart of the
Hipparcos satellite from the
European Space Agency(
1989-
1993). This was used in the Hipparcos Survey which mapped the distances of more than a million stars with unprecedented accuracy - this included 99% of all stars up to
magnitude 11.
The spherical mirror used in this telescope was extremely accurate; if scaled up to the size of the
Atlantic Ocean, bumps on its surface would be about 10
cm high.
Another famous and productive Schmidt camera is the
Oschin Schmidt Telescope at
Palomar Observatory, which was used in the
National Geographic Society - Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS, 1958), the POSS-II survey, the Palomar-Leiden (asteroid) Surveys, and other projects. The telescope used in the
Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search (LONEOS) is also a Schmidt camera. The Schmidt telescope of the
Karl Schwarzschild Observatory is the largest Schmidt camera of the world.
Derivative designs
Lensless Schmidt
Prior to Schmidt's design, the solution to spherical aberration was to place an aperture stop at the center of curvature of the mirror, stopping the aperture to f/10. This removes spherical aberration while preserving the wide field of the short focal-length mirror. However, it does so at the cost of light-gathering ability. Although this solution was well-known long before Bernhard Schmidt invented his corrector plate, the design is is sometimes given the
retronym "lensless Schmidt".
Schmidt-Väisälä
Prof. Yrjö Väisälä originally designed an "astronomical camera" similar to Bernhard Schmidt's "Schmidt camera", but the design was unpublished. Väisälä did mention it in lecture notes in 1924 with a footnote: "problematic spherical focal plane". Once Väisälä saw Schmidt's publication, he promptly went ahead and solved the field-flattening problem in Schmidt's design by placing a doubly-convex lens slightly in front of the film holder. This resulting system is known as:
Schmidt-Väisälä camera or sometimes as
Väisälä camera.
Baker-Schmidt
In 1940,
James Baker of
Harvard University modified the Schmidt camera design to include a convex secondary mirror, which reflected light back toward the primary. The photographic plate was then installed near the primary, facing the sky. This variant is called the Baker-Schmidt camera.
Baker-Nunn
The Baker-Nunn design, by Dr. Baker and
Joseph Nunn, replaced the Baker-Schmidt camera's corrector plate with a small triplet corrector lens closer to the focus of the camera, using 65 mm film. A dozen f/0.75 Baker-Nunn cameras with 20-inch aperatures – each weighing 3.5 tons including a multiple axis mount allowing it to follow satellites in the sky – were used by the
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory to track artificial satellites from the late 1950s to mid 1970s.
Mersenne-Schmidt
The Mersenne-Schmidt camera consists of a concave paraboloidal primary mirror, a convex spherical secondary mirror, and a concave spherical tertiary mirror.
Schmidt-Newtonian
The addition of a flat
secondary mirror at 45° to the optical axis of the Schmidt design creates a
Schmidt-Newtonian telescope.
Schmidt-Cassegrain
The addition of a convex secondary mirror to the Schmidt design directing light through a hole in the primary mirror creates a
Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope.
The last two designs are popular with telescope manufacturers because they're compact and use simple spherical optics.
Notes, references
Further Information
Get more info on 'Schmidt Telescope'.
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