Telescope in a sentence as a noun

A good friend of mine is a phd and lead programmer on a radio telescope project.

For example, people are still blown away by the sight of a far away galaxy in a telescope.

Dear politicians - no, this is not another space telescope.

If a space telescope was nothing more than a big mirror, some guidance, and an imager then we could save billions of dollars, but they are so much more than that.

Moreover, we have to stay well away from the sun as the telescope would focus the sunlight with enough intensity to destroy itself.

Perhaps equally exciting is that the inertial navigation system on the SR-71 is calibrated by looking through a telescope at stars in broad daylight.

Telescope in a sentence as a verb

We get the telescope out on clear nights, she has a picture of her holding a camera obscura image of the recent eclipse, we got out of bed to watch the Space Station fly overhead.

I work in particle astrophysics data processing and management, mostly with gamma ray events for Fermi gamma ray space-telescope.

"Better-than-Hubble" is flat out wrong here, the only correct interpretation is "with larger apertures than Hubble", but there is so much more to a telescope, especially one in Hubble's class.

Many of the instruments and the current solar panels aren't even Nasa buildsThe "better than hubble" telescopes are old keyhole era spy sats, this is the design Hubble was originaly based on.

Unable to account for the phenomenon, the editor of the journal suggested, rather incredulously, that it must have been caused by birds, insects or dust passing front of the Bonilla's telescope.

The idea of the micro-shutter array is that each shutter can be independently operated to shut out interfering light sources, so that the telescope can look much further back in space and time for deep fields.

Telescope definitions

noun

a magnifier of images of distant objects

See also: scope

verb

crush together or collapse; "In the accident, the cars telescoped"; "my hiking sticks telescope and can be put into the backpack"

verb

make smaller or shorter; "the novel was telescoped into a short play"