A
"telescope lens" refers to the part of a telescope that focuses or magnifies distant objects, allowing us to see them with more clarity. It is a specially designed glass or plastic piece that helps bring far away objects closer to our eyes.
Full definition
The eyes of cephalopods, fish, amphibians, and snakes usually have fixed lens shapes, and focusing vision is achieved
by telescoping the lens - similar to how a camera focuses.
The resolution of radar images, however, depends on how the signal is coded and the strength of the return signal, not the size of
a telescope lens or mirror.
Furthermore, because a gravitational lens acts much as
a telescope lens, more light is focused our way, making the galaxies brighter.
Opposite Hott's piece, Hillary Wiedemann's time - lapse video Transit of Venus (2014) captures the bright, almost blinding light from the sun's path as reflected on
a telescope lens.
DeanMJackson is saying scientists lie because they call something transparent which is more transparent than the glass used in camera and
telescope lenses.
It's an incredibly novel design involving periscope - like prisms, which maintains a consistent profile and prevents the need for
a telescoping lens.
So a critical aspect of any kind of relationship therapy is to start helping to open or widen
the telescope lens.