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Robert L. Clark

Amateur Telescope Making in the Internet Age

Finding Parts, Getting Help, and More

Ebook (PDF Format)

The Internet Age is changing everything about human invention and the use of technology. The change has been compared to that of the introduction of printing. Making your own telescope isn't what it used to be, either, thanks partly to the Internet. The old days of grinding and polishing are gone - unless you want to do it! You can now assemble a great instrument from a wide range of affordable Internet-available components, new or used. The Internet is the new parts junkyard, with stuff from all over the world for you to pick through, day or night.In this book you will find out what's generally available and how to access it. You will learn… Mehr

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Produktdetails


  • ISBN: 978-1-4419-6415-1
  • EAN: 9781441964151
  • Produktnummer: 13802399
  • Verlag: Springer-Verlag GmbH
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Erscheinungsjahr: 2010
  • Seitenangabe: 208 S.
  • Plattform: PDF
  • Masse: 4'600 KB
  • Auflage: 2011
  • Abbildungen: 70 schwarz-weiße Abbildungen, Bibliographie

Über den Autor


Although Clark was born in New Hampshire, he spent his early teen years in the New York City area. There he became acquainted with the Theodore Roosevelt Museum of Natural History and at the associated Hayden Planetarium, operated, at that time, by Newton and Margaret Mayhall. Their book Skyshooting provided his first introduction to the idea that someone with only moderate skills can build good scientific instruments. The three volumes of Amateur Telescope Making, edited by Albert G. Ingalls, completed the process of addiction. Clark received a B.S. degree in Mathematics from Stanford University. He then served in the U.S. Air Force at Strategic Air Command headquarters in Nebraska. After his discharge he did graduate work in Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Maryland. After a few years spent in the Military Operations Research industry, he migrated to a university teaching position that lasted 33 years at the University of the District of Columbia. Throughout all this time he continued to be enamored by the process of building telescopes and actually built a few as time permitted. Since retirement he has allowed the addiction to occupy a large part of his enthusiasm, as is made evident by Figure 2.3. Clark now resides in Westminster, Maryland, where he has built a hilltop observatory and is active with the Westminster Astronomical Society.

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