Abstract
I HAVE received several suggestions, for which I wish to express here my indebtedness, as to the probable explanation of the increase of definition in a moving telescope, referred to in my letter in NATURE of March 27. They are chiefly based on the principle of “contrast” as described by Mr. G. W. Butler in NATURE of April 10, but Mr. W. H. Robinson, of Oxford, attributes the increase of definition to “averted vision,” by which a faint source of light is better seen if the eye be directed a little on one side of it. This, at first, seemed to me the correct explanation, the more satisfactory that it involves but a well-known physiological property of the eye. By moving the telescope the object is continually eluding the eye, and visibility by continuous unconscious “averted vision” would be the result. I, however, satisfied myself that there must be some other cause, as a deliberate use of “averted vision” failed entirely to show me the time-ball when I tried it after receiving Mr. Robinson's letter, while I noticed that, as soon as the sweeping motion had begun, it was plainly visible by direct vision, my eye following it all the time. Mr. Butler's suggestion seems therefore more plausible, although less definite.
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GHEURY, M. Increase of Definition in a Moving Telescope. Nature 91, 162 (1913). https://doi.org/10.1038/091162a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/091162a0
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