Abstract

1. It is very remarkable, since the achromatic telescope is altogether of English origin, that in no one of our separate optical treatises are to be found specific rules for its construction, fitted for the use of practical opticians. Some essays of this kind have indeed been attempted; the first of which is found in Martin's “New Elements of Optics," published in 1751; but the principle there adopted is erroneous, and of course the deductions, although possessing a great appearance of simplicity, are wholly useless. Under the article Telescope, in the Encyclopaedia Britannica, is another essay of this kind, which is correct in principle, but far from possessing the degree of simplicity which is desirable for practical purposes. Under the like article in Rees's Cyclopædia is a treatise on the same subject, which may be considered wholly practical; it is founded however upon Martin's method, but corrected by an empyrical multiplier, which answers remarkably well in many instances, but is erroneous in all extraordinary cases.

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