Imagine the Universe!
Imagine Home | Science |

X-ray Telescopes

The German physicist Hans Wolter was attempting to make an X-ray microscope in the early 1950s. He applied the well-known fact that X-rays can be reflected if they strike a smooth metal surface at a grazing angle. He created 3 designs for systems which would focus, or image, X-rays. He never made his microscope, however, because at the time, mirrors could not be manufactured which were smooth enough. Riccardo Giacconi, however, realized that the same designs could be inverted and made as a telescope without such a stringent constraint on the smoothness of the mirror.

Imagine the Universe is a service of the High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC), Dr. Nicholas White (Director), within the Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

The Imagine Team
Project Leader: Dr. Jim Lochner
All material on this site has been created and updated between 1997-2004.

CD Table of Contents