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Basic Telescope Designs

The job of a telescope is to collect light, not to magnify an image (the eyepiece does that job). The larger the objective (the part that collects the light) whether it be a lens, in refractors, or a mirror, in reflectors, the more light the telescope will collect. The more light you can collect, the more detail you will be able to capture, and also important for astrophotography, the shorter your exposures will need to be to capture this detail.

Refractor Telescopes

The type of telescope most people visualize when they hear the word telescope is the 'Refractor'. This is what Galileo used for his break-thru discoveries. A refractor has an objective lens at the front which passes the light straight through to the back of the tube, focusing this light at an eyepiece or for astrophotography a camera.

Advantages:

-No central obstruction (see more in the reflecting scopes), giving higher contrast.

-Due to the simple design they require little maintenance.

-Excellent for planetary and lunar viewing and photography.

-Excellent for wide field viewing and astrophotography especially in shorter focal lengths (more on this later).

-Because the objective is permanently mounted and aligned there is no need for collimation (again more on this in another article).

-Excellent color in apochromatic and ED (Extra Dispersion) designs.

Disadvantages:

-Costlier per inch of aperture (objective) than reflectors and catadioptric telescopes.

-Can become bulky and difficult to manage, especially in larger lens designs.

Newtonian Telescopes

This design was invented by Sir Isaac Newton (he of the apple on the head fame). Instead of a lens at the front of the tube this telescope design uses a concave, parabolic mirror to collect light reflecting it back towards the front of the tube to a flat diagonal mirror which reflects the light out the side of the telescope to the eyepiece or camera for astrophotography.

Advantages:

-Lowest cost per inch of all the telescope designs.

-More light gathering power per dollar because of the lower cost design.

-Absolutely perfect color rendition.

-More compact design compared to a refractor of similar light gathering ability.

-Excellent contrast for planetary and lunar astrophotography and viewing in longer focal lengths.

-Can get excellent wide-field astrophotos and short exposures in shorter focal lengths.

Disadvantages:

-Slight loss of contrast due to the central obstruction (the flat secondary mirror) as compared to a refractor.

-Requires more maintenance, such as collimation (discussed in another article) which is vital for great results in your astrophotography, although you will learn how to do this quickly with practice.

Schmidt-Cassegrain Telescopes

This is a very popular design, with a high tech look. Also known as a CAT (Catadrioptics). They use a combination of lenses and mirrors to collect and focus the light onto the eyepiece or camera. The light enters the telescope through a thin 'lens' called a schmidt corrector plate, goes to the back of the scope to a spherical primary mirror which reflects the light back towards the front. Here the light strikes another mirror, the secondary mirror which is mounted on the corrector plate. This secondary mirror then reflects the light back towards the back where it is focused onto a hole in the primary mirror where the light is collected by an eyepiece or your astrophotography camera.

Advantages:

-Compact and portable.

-Low maintenance although once again collimation is required for top performance.

-Many, many astrophotography accessories available.

-Cheaper per inch of aperture as compared with refractors.

-Excellent all-round telescope, good to very good for both visual and astrophography.

-Very good for planetary and lunar viewing and astrophotography.

-Very good to excellent for DSO (Deep Space Object) astrophotography with a caveat (see the disadvantages).

-Very good to excellent optics, both Meade and Celestron are putting out excellent optics on a consistant basis.

Disadvantages:

-Costlier per inch of aperture as compared with Newtonian telescopes.

-Loss of contrast due to the central obstruction which is even larger than that in the Newtonian scopes.

-Due to their longer focal lengths the field of view is smaller and longer exposures are required for astrophotography, although a lens known as a focal reducer is available which minimizes or removes this problem. The longer focal length is actually an advantage in planetary and lunar photography.

Maksutov-Cassegrain

The Maksutov-Cassegrain telescope design is basically the same as the Schmidt-Cassegrain design except it uses a meniscus lens at the front instead of a Schmidt corrector plate. The main advantage to the Mak telescope design is you will get sharper higher contrast planetary and lunar images when compared with the Schmidt design.

1.

http://skymaps.com/articles/n0606.html

2. Lunar Graze Occultation

... Occultation ...by Mel Bartels Lunar graze occultation occurs when the team of observers is near ... ... night; been able to see 15 members of the Pleiades unaided-eye. The star is just a little ...
http://www.bbastrodesigns.com/aa/occult.html

3. Moon Phase Prediction Software & eBook.

Learn about the Moon with this eBook and predict Moon phases and more with the associated astronomy/astrology software package.
http://thx1142.nsocat.hop.clickbank.net" target="_top

4. Telescopes : Star Testing Astronomical Telescopes

... links. Prairie Astronomy Club: A Memorable Occultation, by Dave Scherping Dave Scherping of the ... ... asterism, along with stargazing guidelines. Pleiades Eleven different interpretations of the ...
http://telescopes2.com/st ...ltelescopes/index.php

5. MCBO Homepage -- News Items

... Jupiter was seen well in the ETX with Io in occultation until it emerged on time at 23.29 BST. The ... ... they were treated to a superb night. M45 the Pleiades were viewed in Binos and Saturn was very ...
http://www.blackettobserv ....org/news/news1.shtml

6. http://www.boulder.swri.edu/AR2004/

... on the binary HD 23642, a member of the Pleiades cluster that was recently discovered to ... ... first light with a new portable high-speed occultation telescope system. He also began a new ...

7. Joe Carr

... Jan 4, 2005 - C/2004 Q2 Comet Machholz, Pleiades & Hyades - observed from Bruno's place. I ... ... of Nov 5, 2004 Lunar Eclipse - Oct 27, 2004 Occultation by Aircraft! What are the odds of an ...
http://www.victoria.rasc.ca/gallery/Joe/

8. Austin Astronomical Society -- History

... at the other end might see only a simple occultation (one disappearance and reappearance). With ... ... to observe the passage of the Moon through the Pleiades star cluster, early on the morning of New ...
http://www.austinastro.org/history.html

9. The New Jersey Astronomical Association

... visible. 20 Moon near the Pleiades at 8h UT (morning sky). Occultation visible from eastern USA ... ... Occultation of the Pleiades (IOTA) 22 Mars 0.64 from Regulus at 16h UT (evening sky). Mags +1.8 ...
http://www.njaa.org/news/skyguide.html

10. Photos and other stuff

... res(124k) Low-res(21k) December 7, 2001. M45 (Pleiades) taken from Fremont Peak, California. Film ... ... on NGC and IC objocts. Software: Lunar Occultation Workbench (6.6MB)- Allows you to compute and ...
http://www.sizzlefish.com/astro_photos.html

11. ASSA African Astronomical History Symposium 2005

... nomenclature. The reappearance of the Pleiades (Isilimela) was used to set the date of ... ... work. (top) Brian Fraser (Director, ASSA Occultation Section) and Jan Hers (Director, ASSA ...
http://www.saao.ac.za/assa/aahs/

12. Jupiter Through a Galilean Telescope

... his notebooks, although not on the day of the occultation. Another possible sighting was later located ... ... able to see it visually. Also as shown on our Pleiades Page, in portions of the sky far from the ...
http://www.pacifier.com/~tpope/Jupiter_Page.htm

13. Guide CD-ROM Star Chart accuracy

... still further dates, proper motion causes the Pleiades to leave their nebula behind. There are ... ... is of particular importance in eclipse and occultation calculations. For the years 1620 to 1998 ...
http://www.projectpluto.com/accuracy.htm

14. Sky Events 2006 - NSA - Northwest Suburban Astronomers

... is .1 from the Pleiades. 21 Spica is less than 1 from the Moon. An occultation will be visible ... ... than .5 from the Pleiades. 27 Mars is about 1 from the Moon. An occultation will be visible ...
http://www.nsaclub.org/astronomy/sky/

15. MGS Status

... Radio Science Occultation Egress Scans, scheduled for 01-010 (1/10/01) through 01-011 (01/11/01), will be commanded by the,mz068, & mz069 mini-sequences. Another DDOR experiment will be conducted on ...
http://www.mars.sgi.com/m ...reports/msop-mgs.html

16. UM Observatory: Telescopes

... wide-field visual observation of the Moon, the Pleiades, and other large, bright objects. Diameter of ... ... s Dr. Michael A'Hearn for use in asteroid occultation studies. The telescope, together with a high ...
http://www.astro.umd.edu/ ...llery/telescopes.html

17. dvaa July 2006 Astronomical Data

... north of the first magnitude star Antares (an occultation occurs in southeast Asia and the southern ... ... of the bright open star cluster M45 (the Pleiades) at 8:00; Venus is 1.5 degrees south of the ...
http://dvaa.org/AData/AD2006_07.html

18. Take Our Word For It, page one - Spotlight

... of another. Astronomers call this phenomenon occultation, from the Latin occultare "hide". Such ... ... are physically adjacent to one another is the Pleiades. Do you enjoy reading Take Our Word For It ...
http://www.takeourword.com/TOW176/page1.html

19. Skylights Archive

... arc. December 13, 2002 Near-grazing occultation of Nu Virginis December 6, 2002 Cloud ... ... Gemini in bronze. November 09, 2001 Taurus and Pleiades beyond bare branches. November 02, 2001 End ...
http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/arc/sklarc.html

20. .pharaoh.

... and Pleiades occultation is supposed to be one of the most beautiful. three stars in a row blinking on and off. can be seen with the naked eye, though binoculars would be better. [details] .to the ...
http://pharaoh.wordpress.com/

21. Thunderchild Observatory

... is the blue green object in the centre and the Pleiades is to the upper right. The image was a single ... ... Cartwheel Galaxay, amazing ring galaxy Triton Occultation Hale-Bopp (page 1) Hale-Bopp (page 2) Hale ...
http://www.home.gil.com.au/~brdowns/

22. Observation Log 4/1/06: The Pleiades Occultation- 3 winks; darn clouds!

... Here. Statistics Total entries in this blog: Total entries in this category: Published On: May 16, 2006 05:16 PM Powered by iBlog Observation Log 4/1/06: The Pleiades Occultation- 3 winks; darn clouds ...
http://homepage.mac.com/s ...0401201653/index.html

23. Pleiades Occultation Series - Astronomy.com Forums

Pleiades Occultation Series General stargazing Pleiades Occultation Series Centaur 08-19-2005, 12:03 AM The Moon is at the period in its 18.6-year cycle of nodes during which it can occult (cover ...
http://www.astronomy.com/ ...286344/PrintPost.aspx

24. Zhumell 20x80 SuperGiant Astronomical Binocular - Binoculars - Binoculars.com

... Lillycrop I purchased this product in March 2006, to observe the April 1st Pleiades occultation and these were the right choice. AWESOME. The entire cluster was within the field of view and with the ...
http://www.binoculars.com ...-binocular-20222.html

25. Dreyfuss Planetarium : Astronomy Calendar 2005

... for full view] February 1 Saturn near the Beehive star cluster 5 Moon near Mars and the Pleiades 17 Occultation of Spica by the Moon 20 Moon near Jupiter 24 Mercury at Greatest Elongation East [click ...
http://www.newarkmuseum.o ...m/pages/astrocal.html

26. http://ssc.spitzer.caltech.edu/roc/spitzer_programs.txt

... Changing Seasons on Pluto: A Stellar Occultation Opportunity Bottke William 20539 GO hilat ... ... Planet Formation Epoch Fazio Giovanni 38 GTO pleiades IRAC Imaging of the Pleiades Fazio Giovanni ...

27. Is Mars as Large as the Moon? You Bet!

... with a slim crescent moon. We'll miss the occultation here (you'd have to go to Alaska or the ... ... moon skims past the southern edge of the Pleiades, M45. Most star clusters would probably ...
http://ephemeris.sjaa.net/0508/e.html

28. A close encounter between Venus and Jupiter

... Jupiter and Saturn. A well-known asterism The Pleiades is also visible in the upper left of the ... ... 32 arcseconds apart (there was no partial occultation). The next time will be at 12:45 on November ...
http://science.nasa.gov/h .../y2000/ast16may_1.htm

29. MAC Astrophotos

... M42 Horsehead Region Cone Nebula M45 the Pleiades M31 the Andromeda Galaxy & companions Saturn ... ... Bob Bootes, Corona Borealis, Hercules Lunar Occultation of Saturn Double Iridium Shuttle Launch from ...
http://www.midlandsastron ...ub.org/ClubPics.shtml

30. Astronomical Society of Southern Africa

... 11.28] Make a plan and observe the lunar occultation of the Pleiades, on December 13. Details are in the 2005 SkyGuide. For more information contact Mr Brian Fraser, Director of the ASSA Occultation ...
http://assa.saao.ac.za/