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List of largest optical refracting telescopes
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Refracting telescopes use a lens to focus light. The Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope, with a lens diameter of 43 inches, is technically the largest, with 39 inches clear for the aperture.The second largest refracting telescope in the world is the Yerkes Observatory 40 inch (102 cm) refractor, used for astronomical and scientific observation for over a century. The next largest refractor telescopes are the James Lick telescope, and the Meudon Great Refractor.
Most are classical great refractors, which used achromatic doublets on an equatorial mount. However, other large refractors include a 21st-century solar telescope which is not directly comparable because it uses a single element non-achromatic lens, and the short-lived Great Paris Exhibition Telescope of 1900. It used a 78-inch (200 cm) Focault siderostat for aiming light into the Image-forming optical system part of the telescope, which had a 125 cm diameter lens. Using a siderostat incurs a reflective loss. Larger meniscus lenses have been used in later catadioptric telescopes which mix refractors and reflectors in the image-forming part of the telescope. As with reflecting telescopes, there was an ongoing struggle to balance cost with size, quality, and usefulness.
List
This list includes some additional examples, such as the Great Paris telescope, which also used a mirror, and some solar telescopes which may have more complicated optical configurations. The SST has an optical aperture of 98 cm (39.37"), although the lens itself is 110 cm (43.31"). It is a single element lens whereas most of this list are doublets, with a crown and flint lens elements.
| Name/Observatory | Location at | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| debut | Modern location name or fate | Lens diameter | Focal length | Built | Comments | Image | |||||||||||
| Great Paris Exhibition Telescope of 1900 | Paris 1900 Exposition | Dismantled 1900 | 125 cm (49.21") | 57 m (187 ft) | 1900 | Fixed lens, scrapped. Aimed via a 2 m reflecting siderostat | [[File:Great Ex Telescope Telescope.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope, | |||||||||||||||||
| ORM | La Palma, | ||||||||||||||||
| Spain | - | 110 cm (43") total diameter | 15 m | 2002 | Single element non-achromatic objective combined with reflective Adaptive optics and a Schupmann corrector. The lens is 110 cm in diameter stopped down to 98 cm (39"). | [[File:Swedish Solar Telescope.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Yerkes Observatory | Williams Bay, Wisconsin, USA | - | 102 cm (40") | 19.4 m (62 ft) | 1897 | Largest in current operation. | [[File:Yerkes 40 inch Refractor Telescope-2006.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| James Lick telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| Lick Observatory | Mount Hamilton, California, USA | - | 91 cm (36") | 17.6 m | 1888 | [[File:Lick Observatory Refractor.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Grande Lunette | |||||||||||||||||
| Paris Observatory | Meudon, France | - | 83 cm + 62 cm (32.67"+24.41") | 16.2 m | 1891 | Double telescope | [[File:Grande Lunette de l'Observatoire de Meudon.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Großer Refraktor | |||||||||||||||||
| Astrophysical Observatory Potsdam | Potsdam, Deutsches Kaiserreich | Potsdam, Germany | 80 cm + 50 cm (31.5"+19.5") | 12.0 m | 1899 | Double telescope by Repsold and Sons, optics by Steinheil | [[File:Potsdam Great Refractor.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Grande Lunette | |||||||||||||||||
| Nice Observatory | Nice, France | since 1988 Côte d'Azur Observatory | last = Hollis | first = H. P. | title = Large Telescopes | journal = The Observatory | volume = 37 | pages = 245–252 | date = 1914 | bibcode = 1914Obs....37..245H }} | 17.9 m | 1886 | Bischoffscheim funded | [[File:Grande Lunette Nice.jpg | 60px]] | ||
| William Thaw Telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| Allegheny Observatory, University of Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA | - | 76 cm (30") | 14.1 m | 1914 | url=http://www.flamsteed.info/fasother6_files/page0001.htm | title=World's Biggest Refractors | access-date=2009-03-30 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081121025916/http://www.flamsteed.info/fasother6_files/page0001.htm | archive-date=2008-11-21 }} | [[File:Allegheny Observatory 2007a.jpg | 60px]] | |||||
| Pulkovo observatory | Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire | Destroyed | 76 cm (30") | 12.8 m (42 feet) | 1885 | Destroyed during WWII, only lens (made by Alvan Clark & Sons) survives. | [[File:Pulkovo 30 inch refracting telescope.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| 28-inch Grubb Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Royal Greenwich Observatory | Greenwich, London, Great Britain | - | 71 cm (28") | 8.5 m | 1894 | [[File:Great Equatorial Telescope full length.JPG | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Rolfscher Refraktor | Rathenow, Germany | - | 70 cm (27.6") | 20.8 m | 1949 | Single element non-achromatic objective with Schupmann corrector. | [[File:Das Rathenower Brachymedial im Optikpark.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Großer Refraktor | |||||||||||||||||
| Vienna Observatory | Vienna, Austrian Empire | Vienna, Austria | 69 cm (27" ) | 10.5 m | 1880 | Largest refractor in 1880, by Grubb | [[File:Refraktor Wien Kerschbaum 1.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Great Treptow Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Treptow Observatory | Berlin, Germany | - | 68 cm (26.77") | 21 m | 1896 | renamed Archenhold Observatory 1946 | [[File:ArchenholdObservatory-GreatRefractor.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Innes Telescope | Observatory Johannesburg, South Africa | Observatory Johannesburg, South Africa | 67 cm (26.5") | 11.6 m | 1909-1925 | Still in operation for educational purposes. By Grubb | |||||||||||
| Yale-Columbia Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Yale Southern Station | Johannesburg, Union of South Africa | Relocated 1952 | 66 cm (26") | 10.8 m | 1925–1952 | Yale-Columbia Refractor moved to Mount Stromlo Observatory in 1952, same telescope as following entry. | |||||||||||
| Yale-Columbia Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Mount Stromlo Observatory | Mount Stromlo, Australia | Destroyed 2003 | 66 cm (26") | 10.8 m | 1952 | Yale-Columbia Refractor – previously located in South Africa. Relocated to Australia in 1952. Destroyed by bush fire on January 18, 2003. | [[File:Fisheye image of yale columbia refractor at stromlo.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Leander McCormick Observatory | Charlottesville, Virginia, USA | - | 66 cm (26") | 9.9 m | 1884 | completed c. 1874, installed 1884 | [[File:Mccormick observatory 1890.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| U.S. Naval Observatory | Foggy Bottom Washington, DC, USA | moved to Northwest, Washington, D.C., 1893 | 66 cm (26") | 9.9 m | 1873 | Largest refractor in 1873. Alvan Clark & Sons mounting replaced with Warner & Swasey mounting in 1893. | [[File:US Navy 030826-N-9593R-043 Personnel at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., prepare the facility's historic 26-inch refractor telescope for optical viewing of Mars.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| title = Telescopes | publisher = The Observatory Science Centre | date = 2018 | url = http://www.the-observatory.org/telescopes | access-date = 11 August 2018 }} | title = Royal Observatory, Greenwich | journal = The Observatory | volume = 20 | pages = 283–286 | date = 1897 | bibcode = 1897Obs....20..283. }} | Equatorial Group, Herstmonceux, Sussex | 66 cm (26") | 6.82 m | 1896 | Manufactured by Sir Howard Grubb as a gift from Sir Henry Thompson; originally used at Greenwich on the same mount as a 30 inch reflector | [[File:"The Thompson 26-inch telescope" - Royal Observatory Greenwich ca 1900 (7890150450).jpg | 60px]] |
| Llano del Hato National Astronomical Observatory | Llano del Hato, Venezuela | - | 65 cm (25.6") | 10.6 m | 1955 | [[File:Smaller Telescope of Observatorio Nacional de Llano del Hato.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Belgrade Observatory | Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbia | Belgrade, Serbia | 65 cm (25.6") | 10.55 m | 1932 | Zeiss made lens, same as at Berlin Observatory | [[File:Pavilion of Large Refractor.JPG | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Hida Observatory | Gifu, Japan | - | 65 cm (25.6") | 10.5 m | 1972 | ||||||||||||
| 65 cm Zeiss Refractor, Pulkovo observatory | url=http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/seri/JHA../0028//0000177.000.html | title=1997JHA....28..177H Page 2:177 | website=articles.adsabs.harvard.edu}} | Saint Petersburg, Russia | 65 cm (25.6") | 10.413 m | 1954 | War reparation from Germany In Pulkovo since 1954. | [[File:Pulkovo refractor.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||
| Observatory History Museum Mitaka 65 cm | Mitaka, Tokyo, Japan | - | 65 cm (25.6") | 10.21 m | 1929 | Carl Zeiss Jena | [[File:NAOJ-mitaka-65cm-refractor-dome.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Berlin-Babelsberg Observatory | |||||||||||||||||
| Berliner Sternwarte Babelsberg | Berlin, Germany | 65 cm (26") | 10.12 m (33 ft) | 1914 | Berlin Observatory just moved to Potsdam-Babelsberg in 1913; Zeiss lens | [[File:Berliner Sternwarte Babelsberg.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Newall Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| National Observatory of Athens | UK | Athens, Greece since 1957 | 62.5 cm (24.5") | 8.86 m (29 ft) | 1869 | Built 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. | [[File:The Newall Telescope at Ferndene, Gateshead in 1872 - TOO 19V.tif | 72x72px]] | |||||||||
| Craig telescope | Wandsworth Common, London | Dismantled 1857 | 61 cm (24") | 24.5 m (80 ft) | 1852 | Problem with lens figuring | [[File:The Family tutor (1851) (14740915186).jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Sproul Observatory | Pennsylvania, USA | Dismantled July 2017 | 61 cm (24") | 11.0 m (36 ft) | 1911 | Currently under restoration to be re-installed in Northwest Arkansas | [[File:Sproul Telescope.png | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Lowell Observatory | Arizona, USA | - | 61 cm (24") | 9.75 m (32 ft) | 1894 | Alvan Clark & Sons telescope | [[File:Clark dome.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Einstein Tower | Potsdam, Germany | - | 60 cm (23.6") | 14 m | 1924 | Tower telescope, fixed lens fed by a heliostat | [[File:Einsteinturm 7443.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Zeiss Double Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Bosscha Observatory | Bandung, Dutch East Indies | Bandung, Indonesia | 60 cm (23.6") | 10.7 m | 1928 | [[File:Bosscha 2003.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Großer Refraktor (Great Refractor)Hamburg Observatory | Bergedorf, Germany | - | 60 cm (23.6") | 9 m | 1911 | by Repsold and Sons, optics (visual + photographic lens) by Steinheil | [[File:Bdstern 1.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Grubb Parsons Double Refractor | Saltsjöbaden, Sweden | - | 60 + 50 cm (23.6" + 19.7") | 8.0 m | 1930 | Stockholm Observatory in Saltsjöbaden | |||||||||||
| Radcliffe Double Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| UCL Observatory | Oxford, UK | Mill Hill, London | 60 + 45 cm (23.6" + 18") | 7.0 m | 1901 | Obtained from the Radcliffe Observatory and installed at UCLO (then known as "ULO") in 1938 | [[File:Radcliffe telescope, University of London Observatory.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Halstead Observatory | Princeton, USA | Roper Mountain Science Center, Greenville, SC | 58.4 cm (23") | 9.8 m (32 ft) | 1881 | by Alvan Clark & Sons | |||||||||||
| Chamberlin Observatory | Colorado, USA | - | 50 cm (20") | 8.5 m (28 ft) | 1891 | First Light 1894 | [[File:Chamberlin Observatory Denver, CO.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Chabot Observatory | Oakland, California | Oakland, California, USA (2000) | 50 cm (20") | 8.5 m (28 ft) | 1914 | "Rachel", Warner & Swazey Company (Optics John A Brashear Company) Refurbished in 2000 and moved to present location. | [[File:Rachel-2-modern.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Van Vleck Observatory | Connecticut, USA | - | 50 cm (20") | 8.4 m (27.5 ft) | 1922 | [[File:Vvo.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Carnegie Double Astrograph | |||||||||||||||||
| Lick Observatory | Mount Hamilton, California, USA | Retired? | 50 cm (20") x 2 | 4.67 m (14 ft) | 1941/1962 (2nd lens) | F7.4 | [[File:Carnegie telescope dome, Aug 2019.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Merz-Repsold 19 inch telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| Brera Observatory | Milan, Italy | Exposed in Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci | 49 cm (19.29") | 7 m (22.97 ft) | 1882 | Largest refracting telescope in Italy | [[File:Telescopio Merz-Repsold di Brera.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Imperial Observatory | Straßburg, German Empire | Strasbourg, France | 48.5 cm (19.1") | 7 m (23 ft) | 1880 | Then largest in German Empire | [[File:Refracting telescope of the Strasbourg observatory.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| 18½-in Dearborn Observatory Refractor | Chicago, USA | Evanston, USA | 47 cm (18.5") | 1862 | by Alvan Clark & Sons | [[File:2007-04-06 3000x2000 evanston nu observatory.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Luneta 46 | |||||||||||||||||
| Observatório Nacional | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | - | 46 cm (18.4") | 9.7 m | 1921 | T. Cooke & Sons{{cite journal | last = Harper | ||||||||||
| Wilder Observatory | Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA | - | 46 cm (18") | (25 ft) | 1903 | by Alvan Clark & Sons | [[File:Wilder obsv.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Flower Observatory | Philadelphia, USA | Dark Sky Project, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand | 46 cm (18") | 6.7 m (22.6 ft) | 1894 | by John Brashear | From 2016 operational at Lake Tekapo, New Zealand. | ||||||||||
| Royal Observatory | Cape Colony, British Empire | South Africa | 46 cm (18") | 6.7 m (22.6 ft) | 1897 | ||||||||||||
| Cooke-Zeiss Refractor, | |||||||||||||||||
| Royal Observatory of Belgium | Uccle, Belgium | - | 45 cm (17.7") | 6.99 m | 1891/1932 | by Cooke & Sons, original 38 cm lens by Merz | |||||||||||
| replaced by 45 cm lens from Zeiss 1932 | |||||||||||||||||
| Gran Ecuatorial Gautier Telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| La Plata Astronomical Observatory | La Plata, Argentina | - | 43.3 cm (17") | 9,7 m | 1894 | Gautier | [[File:Telescopio refractor Gran Ecuatorial Gautier en La Plata.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Brashear Refractor, Goodsell Observatory | Northfield, Minnesota, USA | - | 41.15 cm (16.2") | 1890 | by John Brashear | ||||||||||||
| Herget Telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| Cincinnati Observatory | Cincinnati, Ohio | - | 40.64 cm (16") | 1904 | by Alvan Clark & Sons | [[File:Cincinnati Observatory.JPG | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Vatican Observatory | Castel Gandolfo, Italy | - | 40 cm (16") | 6.0 m | 1881 | by Zeiss | [[File:Vatican Observatory Zeiss Visual Refractor Telescope.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Dorides Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| National Observatory of Athens | Athens, Greece | Athens, Greece | 40 cm (16") | 5,08 m | 1901 | by Gautier | |||||||||||
| Washburn Observatory | Madison, Wisconsin, USA | In regular use for education and general public. | 39.5 cm (15.56") | 6.7 m (22.6 ft) | 1881 | by Alvan Clark & Sons | |||||||||||
| Dominion Observatory Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Dominion Observatory | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada | Moved to Helen Sawyer-Hogg Observatory (Canada Science and Technology Museum, Ottawa) in 1974 | 38.1 cm (15") | 571.5 cm | 1905 | Original achromat doublet by John Brashear replaced with apochomat triplet by Perkin-Elmer in 1958. Currently used for education and outreach. | |||||||||||
| Lunette Arago | |||||||||||||||||
| Paris Observatory | Paris, France | - | 38 cm (15") | 9 m | 1883 | by Gautier and Henry brothers | [[File:Paris-observatoirelunettebrünner.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Double Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Fabra Observatory | Barcelona, Spain | - | 38 cm + 38 cm (15" + 15") | 6 m + 4 m | 1904 | Double telescope | |||||||||||
| by Mailhat, Paris | [[File:Fabra Observatory Refractor.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||||||||
| Gran Ecuatorial Observatorio Astronómico Nacional | Tacubaya, México | - | 38 cm (15") | 4.8 m | 1885 | by Howard Grubb | |||||||||||
| url=http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/hco/grref.html | title=Harvard College Observatory: Great Refractor | author= | website=www.cfa.harvard.edu | date=4 October 2023 }} | Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA | - | 38 cm (15") | 6.9 m | 1847 | largest telescope in America for 20 years | [[File:Great Refractor.jpg | 60px]] | |||||
| Merz & Mahler Refractor, Pulkovo observatory | Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire | Rescued to Leningrad city in WWII (?) | 38 cm (15") | 6.9 m | 1839 | (original) twin of the Harvard Great Refractor | |||||||||||
| Lunette coudée | |||||||||||||||||
| Lyon Observatory | Saint-Genis-Laval, France | - | 36.6 cm | 7.66 m | 1887 | Equatorial coudé by Maurice Loewy | [[File:Observatoire Lyon Coudee.JPG | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Telescopio Amici | |||||||||||||||||
| Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri | Florence, Italy | - | 36 cm | 5 m | 1872 | 28 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 cm | 1897 | Double telescope | |||||||||||
| by Gautier and Henry brothers | |||||||||||||||||
| Astrograph | |||||||||||||||||
| Vienna Observatory | Vienna, Austrian Empire | Vienna, Austria | 34 cm + 26 cm (13.3" + 10.2") | 3.4 m + 3.4 m | 1885 | Double telescope | |||||||||||
| by Steinheil | |||||||||||||||||
| Markree Observatory | County Sligo, Republic of Ireland | Moved to Singapore, then the University of Manila | 33.8 cm (13.3") | 7.6 m (25′) | 1834 | Used to discover 9 Metis; the largest refractor in the World for several decades | [[File:August William Doberck Markree refracting telescope 13,3-inch Cauchoix objective darker.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Perth Astrograph, Perth Observatory | Old Perth Observatory, Mount Eliza, Western Australia | Perth Observatory, Bickley, Western Australia. Used for public education and outreach | 33 cm (13") | 3.34 m | 1897 | Designed and built by Howard Grubb & Co. Relocated to Bickley ~1966. The original telescope (both camera and guide scopes), mount and dome were re-erected at Bickley | |||||||||||
| Fitz-Clark Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Allegheny Observatory, University of Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA | - | 32.02 cm (13") | 4.62 | 1861 | Fitz made, visual/photographic. In 1895 established that Saturn's Rings are made up of particles and not solid. | [[File:Allegheny Observatory 2007a.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| H. Fitz-H.G. Fitz Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Henry Ruthurfurd, Private Observatory | New York City, USA | - | 32.02 cm (13") | 4.62 | 1864 | Fitz made, visual/photographic. Started by Henry, finished by son Henry Giles | |||||||||||
| Bamberg Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Urania Observatory (Berlin) | Berlin-Moabit, Prussia | Berlin, Germany | 31.4 cm (12.36") | 5 m | 1889 | then biggest in Prussia, moved to Insulaner Wilhelm Foerster Observatory in 1963 | [[File:Bamberg-Refraktor.P1139429.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| H. Fitz 12.6" refractor | Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA | 12.6 in 32 cm | 508 cm (200") | 1857 | The telescopes were restored to functionality as part of the University of Michigan's 2009 International Year of Astronomy celebration. Viewing nights and open houses have been running since then. | [[File:12.6" Fitz telescope in Ann Arbor.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Grubb refractor, Keele Observatory | Oxford, England | Keele University, England (since 1962), | 31.0 cm (12.25") | 4.39 m | 1874 | Still 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. | [[File:KeeleOxford.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| South Telescope, Dunsink Observatory | Dublin, Ireland | Dublin, Ireland | 30 cm (12") | 1868 | by Grubb, the telescope is still used for various outreach activities | ||||||||||||
| Northumberland Telescope, Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge University | Cambridge, England | Still in use by Cambridge University Astronomical Society and Cambridge Astronomical Association | 30 cm (12") | 5.95m | 1833 | Original lens 11.6" made by Cauchoix of Paris, replaced on 150th anniversary by 12" lens designed by R.V. Willstrop, and made by A.E. Optics of Cambridge. | [[File:Northumberland Telescope Dome - geograph.org.uk - 370647.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Urania Sternwarte (Zurich) | Zurich, Switzerland | - | 30 cm (12") | 5.05 m | 1907 | by Zeiss | [[File:Zürich - Lindenhof - Urania-Sternwarte - Kuppel IMG 1911.JPG | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Griffith Observatory | Los Angeles | - | 30 cm (12") | 5.03 m | 1931 | by Zeiss | [[File:ග්රිෆිත් දුරේක්ෂය.JPG | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Clark-Refraktor | |||||||||||||||||
| Vienna Observatory | Vienna, Austrian Empire | Vienna, Austria | 30 cm (12") | 5.06 m | 1880 | by Clark and Sons | |||||||||||
| Deutsches Museum | Munich, Germany | - | 30 cm (12") | 5.0 m | 1924 | by Zeiss | [[File:Deutsches Museum Munich 2014 02.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Ladd Observatory, | |||||||||||||||||
| Brown University | Providence, Rhode Island, USA | Still in use for instruction and public education | 30 cm (12") | 4.6 m (15 ft) | 1891 | Lens designed by Charles S. Hastings and made by John Brashear; telescope mount by George N. Saegmuller | [[File:Ladd Observatory telescope.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Irving Porter Church Memorial Telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| Fuertes Observatory, Cornell University | Ithaca, New York | Still used for instruction and public outreach. | 30 cm (12") | 4.57 m (15 ft) | 1922 | Optics by John Brashear, mounting by Warner & Swasey. | [[File:Irving Porter Church Telescope.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Jewett Observatory | Pullman, Washington, USA | Used for instruction and pleasure | 30 cm (12") | 4.57 m (15 ft) | 1953 | Lens assembled in 1887-1889 by Alvan Clark & Sons | [[File:Jewett Observatory 01-04-15.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Silesian Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory | Katowice/Chorzów, Silesia, Poland | 30 cm (12") | 4.5 m | 1955 | Largest and oldest Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory in Poland. The 3rd largest in Eastern Europe (east of Germany), after Pulkovo Observatory in Saint Petersburg, Russia and Belgrade Observatory in Belgrade, Serbia | [[File:Planetarium WPKiW.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| University of Illinois Observatory | Urbana, Illinois, USA | Used for instruction and pleasure | 30 cm (12") | 4.57 m (15 ft) | 1896 | by John Brashear, National Historic Landmark, still used for instruction | [[File:Champaign-Urbana area IMG 1138.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Equatorial Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Sydney Observatory | Sydney, Australia | Still in use for education and public outreach | 28.956cm (11.4") | - | 1874 | by Hugo Schroeder, used to view transit of Venus that occurred on 9 December 1874 | [[File:Schroeder telescope in use.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Schroeder Refractor | Laverne,California, USA | Used for pleasure and public outreach | 28 cm (11") | 4.57 m | 1975 | Largest completely amateur made, and largest portable classical refractor | |||||||||||
| Mitchel Telescope | |||||||||||||||||
| Cincinnati Observatory | Cincinnati, Ohio, USA | - | 28 cm (11") | 1843 | Merz & Mahler; Oldest professional telescope still used weekly by the public | [[File:Refractor Cincinnati observatory.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Brashear Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Nicholas E. Wagman Observatory | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA | - | 28 cm (11") | 1910 | John Brashear, Amateur Astronomers Association of Pittsburgh | ||||||||||||
| Great Refractor | |||||||||||||||||
| Kuffner Observatory | Vienna, Austria | - | 27 cm + 15.6 cm | ||||||||||||||
| (10.6" + 6.1") | 350 cm + 294 cm | 1884 + 1890 | Double telescope | ||||||||||||||
| by Repsold and Sons, optics by Steinheil | [[File:Kuffner Observatory Refractor.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||||||||
| Repsold Refractor (10-duims) | |||||||||||||||||
| Leiden Observatory | Leiden, Netherlands | - | 26.6 cm (10.5") | 399,5 cm | 1885 | Repsold and Sons, optics by Alvan Clark & Sons | |||||||||||
| Äquatoreal (Equatorial) | |||||||||||||||||
| Hamburg Observatory | Millerntor Observatory, Hamburg, Germany | Hamburg Observatory, Bergedorf, Germany | 26 cm (10.2") | 3 m | 1867 | Repsold and Sons, optics by G. & S. Merz | |||||||||||
| Hume Cronyn Memorial Observatory | Western University | ||||||||||||||||
| London, Ontario, Canada | - | 25.4 cm (10") | 4.386 m (172") | 1940 | by Perkin-Elmer Corp. Glass from Chance Brothers. | [[File:Cronyn Observatory 254mm refractor.jpg | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Mills Observatory | Dundee, Scotland (1951) | 25 cm (10") | 1871 | by T. Cooke & Sons. Training telescope at St. Andrews 1938–1951 | [[File:The 10-inch Cooke Refractormills.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||||
| Coats Observatory | Paisley, Scotland (1898) | 25 cm (10") | 1898 | by Howard Grubb. Replaced 5" refractor by Thomas Cooke, installed in 1883. | [[File:Grubb-Telescope.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||||
| Blackett Observatory | Marlborough College | ||||||||||||||||
| Wiltshire, England | - | 25 cm (10") | 1860 | by Thomas Cooke. | - | ||||||||||||
| Quito Astronomical Observatory | Quito | La Alameda park | 24 cm (9.6") | 1875 | An operational 1875 Merz telescope and one of the Oldest Observatories in South America, founded in 1873. | [[File:Antique Telescope at the Quito Astronomical Observatory 002.JPG | 60px]] | ||||||||||
| Fraunhofer Refractor, United States Naval Observatory (Foggy Bottom) | Foggy Bottom, D.C., USA | 24.4 cm (9.6") | 1844 | ||||||||||||||
| Fraunhofer-Refraktor | |||||||||||||||||
| Berlin Observatory | Berlin-Kreuzberg, Kingdom of Prussia, German Confederation | Moved 1913 to Munich, Germany | 24 cm (9.6") | 4 m (13.4′) | 1835 | Used to discover Neptune; in Deutsches Museum, München since 1913 | [[File:Sternwarte Berlin Schinkel.jpg | 60px]] | |||||||||
| Great Dorpat Refractor (Fraunhofer) | |||||||||||||||||
| Dorpat/Tartu Observatory (Old Building) | Dorpat, Governorate of Livonia | Tartu, Estonia | 24 cm (9.6") | 4 m (13.4′) | 1824 | "...the first modern, achromatic, refracting telescope." | [[File:Tartu tähetorn 2006.jpg | 60px]] |
References
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