• @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    Optical Emgineer reporting in.

    This is bullshite.

    Read for yourselves:
    https://www.quora.com/Can-we-use-a-microscope-as-a-telescope-by-just-inverting-it

    What you can learn today is, that if you use a microscope “the other way around”, something big is imaged into somethjng small on the focal plane.
    Zeiss, a company that manufactures a shitton of optical stuff, has a very successful semi-conductor branch. That branch started off when some engineers from the microscope-department fiddled around with " inverted" microscopes during their lunchtime to create the first optics for lithography from Zeiss.

    Source: i worked there. I know those engineers.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      I’m a microbiologist and the first thing I thought is this is a person with a homework question asking why you can’t flip a microscope to make a telescope. What better way to get the right answer than to confidently proclaim on the Internet bad information as fact? Then I was it’s a bot copying content from Reddit and now feel gross.

    • @[email protected]
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      56 months ago

      Tbh that’s in a modern sense, historically a microscope was just a single lense, which could be used for both (as far as I know). And the Dutch had the best lense makers and innovators that developed the optie technology early on.

    • @voracitude
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      46 months ago

      I’m thinking about going back to school. What did you have to study to get into optical engineering? Is it a branch of mechanical engineering? And what’s the daily like in that field?

  • @WhiteOakBayou
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    56 months ago

    If I look through the big hole in the bottom I just see two points of light. Down voted.

  • @CookieOfFortune
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    56 months ago

    Maybe in the simplest sense but it’d be pretty difficult to do either with a modern device.