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Microscope, Astronomical, Stereo Blink.

Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum

Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum
Washington, DC, United States

This is a blink stereo comparator microscope manufactured about 1960 by the C. Ridell Company of Williams Bay, Wisconsin for the U. S. Naval Observatory. It is typical of a class of discovery devices used in photographic astronomy from the late 19th through the 20th centuries to detect variable stars and asteroids, and high-proper motion stars. Two photographs of the same part of the sky were placed side by side in parallel microscopes that through a set of mirrors combined the two images, allowing the observer to switch rapidly between the two aligned scenes. Anything in the field of view that changes becomes visible through a shifting or pulsating image. In this design, the usual viewing eyepiece has been replaced with a system that projects images of the plates onto a circular screen. This reduced the fatigue of this tedious operation, which sometimes could take decades. It was transferred to NASM by the U S Naval Observatory in 1996 and is now on display in the Explore the Universe gallery utilizing modern low-voltage halogen illumination to demonstrate the technique.

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Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum

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