Telescope mount

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In astronomy, the telescope mount is an important part of the overall design of an operational telescope. Many sorts of mounts have been developed over the years, with the majority of effort being put into systems that can track the motion of the stars as the Earth rotates with a single motion.

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[edit] Alt-az mounts

Main article: Altazimuth mount

The earliest types of mounts are today known as altitude-azimuth, or alt-az systems. The name refers to the way the system allows the telescope to be moved in altitude, up and down, or azimuth, side to side, as separate motions. One negative thing in this mount is that telescopes field-of-view will then rotate at varying speed while the telescope tracks along the sky. This type of mount is used in practically all modern big telescopes, and has also become popular with inexpensive commercial and hobby constructions.

Support mount (Stützmontierung) devised by Alfred Jensch
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Support mount (Stützmontierung) devised by Alfred Jensch

[edit] Equatorial mounts

Main article: Equatorial mount

The introduction of the equatorial mount displaced most alt-az systems for many serious users for several centuries. By tilting the horizontal base of an alt-az system up until it is parallel to Earth's equatorial plane, the azimuth rotation then swings the telescope in an arc that follows the stars as they move across the sky due to Earth's rotation. By attaching a simple clockwork mechanism to this axis, the equatorial system makes long observation easy. Also the telescope's field-of-view does not rotate, which all combined make these simpler tools to use in e.g. astro-photography.

[edit] Transit

For Transit telescopes there is a special mount, whereby the telescope point always along the meridian, but its elevation can be varied.

[edit] Fixed

Some telescopes are entirely fixed, for example the Zenith telescopes that point only straight up.

Another special fixed system is used on solar telescopes, where the telescope itself is fixed, but light comes in via two flat mirrors, one of which tracks sun on the sky.


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