"The love of truth; the pleasure
the mind feels in overcoming difficulties; the satisfaction of contributing
to the general store of knowledge; the engrossing nature of a pursuit
so exalted as that of diving into the wonders of creation; all these
are very powerful incentives to exertion..."
Part of the Presidential address given by the third Earl to the
1854 meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science
(giving some insight into his motives for the construction of his
telescopes and also into the character of the man).
Lord Rosse spent a large part of his observing time on the 36
inch telescope studying the mysterious nebulae, such as M27 and
the Great Nebulae in Andromeda. In these and other similar
studies, the 36 inch telescope gave him tantalizing glimpses of
possible clumps of stars within an otherwise fuzzy mass of gas.
It was to improve the resolution of such nebulae that he built
the
72 inch telescope.
The 36 inch also gave Lord Rosse views of the moon at magnifications
up to 900, allowing exploration of aspects of the lunar topography
never before observed. Dr. Thomas Romney Robinson wrote in 1840:
"It is scarcely possible to preserve the
necessary sobriety of language, in speaking of the Moon's appearance
with this instrument, which discovers a multitude of new objects
at every point of its surface"
The smaller telescope was used by the fourth Earl to study spectra
of eleven nebulae and observations using it showed that only 4 of
them were gaseous, the rest exhibiting the continuous spectra characteristic
of stellar objects. However, the installation of the spectrometer
was not ideal and made for difficult observations. |