The idea of using the spherical aberration of a meniscus lens to correct the opposite aberration in a spherical
objective dates back as far as W. F. Hamilton’s 1814
Hamiltonian telescope, in Colonel A. Mangin's 1876
Mangin mirror, and also appears in
Ludwig Schupmann’s
Schupmann medial telescope near the end of the 19th century. After the invention of the wide-field
Schmidt camera in the early 1930s, at least four optical designers in early 1940s war-torn Europe came up with the idea of replacing the complicated
Schmidt corrector plate with a simpler meniscus lens, including
Albert Bouwers,
Dmitri Dmitrievich Maksutov, K. Penning, and
Dennis Gabor. All of these designs used full aperture correctors (a
meniscus corrector shell) to create a wide-field telescope with little or no
coma or
astigmatism. Albert Bouwers built a prototype
meniscus telescope in August 1940 and patented it in February 1941. His design had the mirror and meniscus lens with surfaces that had a common centre of curvature, called a "
concentric" or "
monocentric" telescope. The design had an ultrawide field of view but did not correct
chromatic aberration and was only suitable as a monochromatic astronomical camera. Dmitri Maksutov built a prototype for a similar type of meniscus telescope, the
Maksutov telescope, in October 1941, and patented it in November of that same year. His design corrected most spherical aberration and also corrected for chromatic aberration by placing a weakly negative-shaped meniscus corrector closer to the primary mirror.
Dennis Gabor’s 1941 design was a non-monocentric meniscus corrector. Wartime secrecy kept these designers from knowing about each other's design, making each invention independent. ==See also==