Celestron FirstScope Telescope FirstScope Telescope Info Sheet (English)

Celestron FirstScope Telescope Manual

Celestron FirstScope Telescope manual content summary:

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Giovanni
Domenico Cassini
Galileo
Annie Jump
EDWIN POWELL HUBBLE
Sir Isaac Newton
J
ohannes Kepler
JACOB
METIUS
Nicolaus Copernicus
Cannon
SIR ARTHUR
STANLEY
Sacharias
TYGE OTTESEN BRAHE
Hans
Lippershey
Giovanni
Domenico Cassini
Galileo
Giovanni
Domenico Cassini
Galileo
Annie Jump
EDWIN POWELL HUBBLE
Sir Isaac Newton
J
ohannes Kepler
JACOB
METIUS
Nicolaus Copernicus
Cannon
SIR ARTHUR
STANLEY
Sacharias
TYGE OTTESEN BRAHE
Hans
Lippershey
Giovanni
Domenico Cassini
Galileo
Giovanni
Domenico Cassini
Galileo
Annie Jump
EDWIN POWELL HUBBLE
Sir Isaac Newton
J
ohannes Kepler
JACOB
METIUS
Nicolaus Copernicus
Cannon
SIR ARTHUR
STANLEY
Sacharias
TYGE OTTESEN BRAHE
Hans
Lippershey
Giovanni
Domenico Cassini
Galileo
Sir
Arthur Stanley Sacharias Tyge Ottesen Brahe
EDWIN POWELL HUBBLE
Sir Isaac Newton
J
ohannes Kepler
JACOB
Galileo Galilei
was an Italian scientist whose work in the
17th century helped unlock many secrets
of astronomy and natural motion. Galileo’s
achievements include building the first
high-powered astronomical telescope.
Johannes Kepler
was the first to correctly
explain planetary motion, thereby,
becoming founder of celestial
mechanics and the first
“natural laws”.
Edwin Powell
Hubble
was the first astronomer to
find observable evidence
that the universe is
expanding, a discovery
which helped establish the
theory of the “Big Bang.”
Sir Isaac Newton
constructed a reflecting telescope, the first of its kind, and
the prototype of the largest modern optical telescopes.
Giovanni
Domenico Cassini’s
work established much of what we know of the solar system,
including size, rotational periods of nearby planets, exact
orbits of the moons of Jupiter, satellites of Saturn, and
the gap in Saturn’s rings, which are
named after him.
FirstScope Telescope
Annie Jump
Cannon
had a phenomenal eye for
stellar spectra, and her Draper
catalogs were valued as the
work of a single observer.
Cannon also published catalogs
of variable stars (including 300
she discovered). Her career
spanned more than forty years,
during which women in science won
grudging acceptance.
Official Product Of The 2009 International Year of Astronomy