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The stuff I read says they match well enough for small mirrors that it
doesn't matter which you use - but this is for a comparison of two mirrors each centred on the optical axis. What I'm wondering is if you could use a small pair of spherical mirrors tipped a bit towards a single flat one and two eyepieces to make light cheap binoculars...lighter at the far end anyway... |
#2
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jtaylor wrote:
The stuff I read says they match well enough for small mirrors that it doesn't matter which you use - but this is for a comparison of two mirrors each centred on the optical axis. Provided that the radius of curvature R is long compared to the diameter of the mirror D then the spherical mirror is a close enough approximation to a parabola. Faster mirrors need to be parabolised. What I'm wondering is if you could use a small pair of spherical mirrors tipped a bit towards a single flat one and two eyepieces to make light cheap binoculars...lighter at the far end anyway... You can do it, but you won't get what you expect. Try it out instead with an aperture mask placed in front of a larger telescope. Regards, Martin Brown |
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Why tie yourself to one secondary flat?
I'll note that if you do run an offset mirrror, the aberrateions of hte telescope will be that of a mirror that would be the full diameter of the parabola that your mirror would have been cut out of. In other words, if the optical axis is 1" outside the 4" mirror edge, the aberrations would be that of a 10" parabolic mirror. -- Why isn't there an Ozone Hole at the NORTH Pole? |
#4
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At f/10 a sphere is about the same as a parabola with 1/4 wave error.
Works for most scopes, but they are small because at f/10 the tubes can get pretty long! Gonna be one hell of a big pair of binoculars when you get done! |
#5
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![]() "Bob May" wrote in message ... Why tie yourself to one secondary flat? I thought it might make things simpler. I'll note that if you do run an offset mirrror, the aberrateions of hte telescope will be that of a mirror that would be the full diameter of the parabola that your mirror would have been cut out of. In other words, if the optical axis is 1" outside the 4" mirror edge, the aberrations would be that of a 10" parabolic mirror. If the two mirrors were touching and tilted slightly towards each other, a flat could be mounted above the tubes, and eyepieces above the mirrors. The optical axes would then be what, 1/2, 2/3of the way to the edge? For a pair of 3" mirrors how much difference could it make? |
#6
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Gil wrote:
At f/10 a sphere is about the same as a parabola with 1/4 wave error. Works for most scopes, but they are small because at f/10 the tubes can get pretty long! Actually it depends on the aperature of the mirror. In a 4" mirror you can go even faster than f/10. Larger than 8" and there is just too much difference from a sphere for f/10 to handle it. -- Bill |
#7
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"jtaylor" wrote in
: The stuff I read says they match well enough for small mirrors that it doesn't matter which you use - but this is for a comparison of two mirrors each centred on the optical axis. It actually has nothing to do with the size of the mirror. The key thing is the focal ratio. An f100 spherical mirror would be indistinguishable from a parabola. When you get to f10 the error is about 1/4 wave so would probably still be acceptable. For mirrors faster than f10 you would definitely want to parabolise. Note that with small mirrors it is possible to parabolise them via mechanical distortion (via a bolt glued to the back of the mirror - there was an article in S & T about this a few years back). If you are interested in binoscopes in general, a guy in our local club has a superb 16"er. See he http://www.binoscope.co.nz/index.html Klazmon. What I'm wondering is if you could use a small pair of spherical mirrors tipped a bit towards a single flat one and two eyepieces to make light cheap binoculars...lighter at the far end anyway... |
#8
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![]() jtaylor wrote: The stuff I read says they match well enough for small mirrors that it doesn't matter which you use - but this is for a comparison of two mirrors each centred on the optical axis. What I'm wondering is if you could use a small pair of spherical mirrors tipped a bit towards a single flat one and two eyepieces to make light cheap binoculars...lighter at the far end anyway... Hi The only issue with tilting mirror is that you increase the error from a parabola as you move off the optical axis of a parabola. A tilted mirror is most correct when it fits into the location on the surface of a parabola that has the same relative focus point and source. Imagine going up the side of the parabolic surface and drawing a circle to cut out that piece. Now use that piece at the same offset and angle from the original parabolas axis. Dwight |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... jtaylor wrote: The stuff I read says they match well enough for small mirrors that it doesn't matter which you use - but this is for a comparison of two mirrors each centred on the optical axis. What I'm wondering is if you could use a small pair of spherical mirrors tipped a bit towards a single flat one and two eyepieces to make light cheap binoculars...lighter at the far end anyway... Hi The only issue with tilting mirror is that you increase the error from a parabola as you move off the optical axis of a parabola. A tilted mirror is most correct when it fits into the location on the surface of a parabola that has the same relative focus point and source. Imagine going up the side of the parabolic surface and drawing a circle to cut out that piece. Now use that piece at the same offset and angle from the original parabolas axis. Dwight I knew that. What I don't know is how far from the centre you could put a spherical mirror of some specified dimension before the error would be above acceptable limits. And as a practical matter, how closely matched, in terms of focal length, am I likely to get two, say, 3" mirrors (buying, not making, me making them would make the answer "not at all close"). |
#10
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Lkazlan Klazmon wrote:
It actually has nothing to do with the size of the mirror. The key thing is the focal ratio. An f100 spherical mirror would be indistinguishable from a parabola. When you get to f10 the error is about 1/4 wave so would probably still be acceptable. For mirrors faster than f10 you would definitely want to parabolise. Actually, it involves *both* the f/ratio *and* the diameter of the primary mirror. Long focal lengths can make the spherical mirror approach the curve of a paraboloidal one to at least a point which will satisfy the Rayleigh limit (1/4 wave wavefront error or 1/8th wave surface error). However, as the mirror size gets larger, the physical deviation between a spherical mirror and a paraboloidal one of approximately the same focal length can go beyond the often-quoted 1/8th wave criteria. You then have to increase the f/ratio of the mirror to compensate (see HOW TO MAKE A TELESCOPE by J. Texereau, p. 18-19): The formula for this is 88.6D**4 = f**3 (** means to the power of: i.e.: 2**3 = "two cubed" = 8), where f is the focal length and D is the aperture (in inches). Substituting F=f/D to get the f/ratio, we get: F = cube-root (88.6*D). The following minimums can just achieve the 1/8th wave surface rule of thumb: APERTURE TEXEREAU MINIMUM F/RATIO 3 inch f/6.4 4 inch f/7.1 6 inch f/8.1 8 inch f/8.9 10 inch f/9.6 12 inch f/10.2 A better somewhat more "diffraction limited" performance can be achieved by making the circle of least confusion of the light from the spherical mirror smaller than the radius of the diffraction disk. This results in the following relation: D = .00854(F**3) (for D in centimeters and F is the f/ratio), and for English units: D = ..00336(F**3). Thus, the minimum f/ratio goes as the cube root of the mirror diameter, or the DIFFRACTION-LIMITED F/RATIO: F = 0.675(D)**(1/3). For example, the typical "department store" 3 inch Newtonian frequently uses a spherical f/10 mirror, and should give reasonably good images as long as the figure is smooth and the secondary mirror isn't terribly big. For common apertures, the following approximate minimum f/ratios for Diffraction-Limited Newtonians using spherical primary mirrors can be found below: APERTURE F/RATIO FOR DIFFRACTION-LIMITED SPHERICAL MIRRORS ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 inches f/9.6 (28.8 inch focal length) 4 inches f/10.6 (42.4 inch focal length) 6 inches f/12.1 (72.6 inch focal length) 8 inches f/13.4 (107.2 inch focal length) 10 inches f/14.4 (144 inch focal length) 12 inches f/15.3 (183.6 inch focal length) Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 12th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 31 - Aug. 5, 2005, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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