
Fig 1: Sketches of the Orion Nebulae, on show within the Armagh Planetarium.
It takes a very good telescope to see deep into house, however it takes a Nice Telescope to alter how we see your entire universe. In 1845 such a telescope was constructed by the threerd Earl of Rosse, within the grounds of his fortress within the city of Birr, County Offaly. He didn’t construct it alone nevertheless; he was impressed by earlier devices, such because the 4-foot reflector made by Sir William Herschel. That telescope had been so highly effective that it helped Sir Herschel uncover a brand new planet for the primary time in hundreds of years. He was additionally aided by more moderen developments, corresponding to the brand new know-how employed by Thomas Grubb in his 15-inch telescope he constructed for Armagh Observatory in 1834.
The Nice Telescope used a 6-foot mirror to collect gentle. It was the most important mirror ever produced at the moment, and it took many makes an attempt to get it proper. The mirror was manufactured from Speculum, manufactured from copper and tin, that might be polished to a really reflective floor. The issue dealing with the threerd Earl and different instrument makers was that Speculum can be very brittle, and was so heavy it may crack underneath its personal weight. The cooling course of needed to be accomplished extraordinarily slowly, by placing the molten steel mirror into an oven, and turning down the temperature over a protracted interval. How lengthy? Nicely, the primary try slowly cooled over six lengthy weeks, throughout which the oven was watched always. When it was eliminated, it cracked as a result of the centre was nonetheless molten, and solely the skin had cooled sufficiently. The second try was given sixteen weeks and was profitable.
When it was assembled the telescope was instantly turned in the direction of one of many nice astronomical questions of the 19th century. For many years some objects within the sky had been discovered to be ‘nebulous’, they have been stuffed with fuzzy, gaseous clouds, that might not be resolved into clear pictures by different telescopes. Resolving these nebulae and discovering their construction turned extraordinarily essential, and within the Spring of 1845, Lord Rosse started to analyze them.
He turned his consideration to at least one specific nebula, designated as Messier 51, or M51. When he turned the telescope to analyze it in April 1845 he was shocked to see a spiral within the eyepiece in entrance of him on these chilly nights. He sketched what he noticed, exactly measuring the dimensions of the arms with a Micrometer, and on 19 June 1845 he offered it to the scientific neighborhood on the annual assembly of the British Affiliation for the Development of Science. The drawings instantly produced appreciable debate, with astronomers throughout Europe drawing battle traces for and in opposition to the validity of his claims.
The drawings would later be vindicated by the invention of astrophotography, which together with ever bigger telescopes, confirmed that the inventive hand of the threerd Earl had sketched them with excessive accuracy.

Fig 2: One of many earliest drawings of M51, displaying the lengthy spiral arms of the galaxy.
Nevertheless, within the 1840’s images had not but been utilized to the science of astronomy. The accuracy of the drawings that the threerd Earl, and the astronomers corresponding to T.R. Robinson who labored with him, was essential to their status. In his writings the threerd Earl went to nice lengths to explain his technique of drawing, and of the development of the telescope. He compiled a lot of his drawings from smaller sketches taken over many nights, to make a composite of the photographs. There was important debate in his staff about whether or not it was higher to attract white chalk on black paper, or to make use of pencil on white paper. The benefit of black paper and white chalk was that it was simpler for the observer, seated on the observing platform twenty toes above the bottom, to see the darkish.
The unique drawings nonetheless survive to today and have had a substantial affect on how we perceive the universe. They’ve remained within the care of the Rosse household for generations, and not too long ago the Heritage Council of Eire have carried out restoration initiatives on them to arrange the drawings for exhibition in Europe and the UK. Via the Astronomical Observatories of Eire, a mission that has introduced collectively Birr Fort, Dunsink Observatory and Armagh Observatory to have fun the Irish contribution to the historical past of astronomy, these drawings have now come to Armagh for a short lived exhibition. The exhibition will run till 27 April 2025 and is hosted within the Armagh Planetarium Copernicus Corridor.