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If much of the light pollution is from arc lighting, then there might
be pulsation synchronized with the 60 Hz power grid. It might be possible to use a synchronized LCD panel as an effective filter. |
#2
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![]() "Stephen G. Giannoni" wrote in message ... If much of the light pollution is from arc lighting, then there might be pulsation synchronized with the 60 Hz power grid. It might be possible to use a synchronized LCD panel as an effective filter. Unfortunately, you are unlikely to have much observing time left through such a filter... The problem is that an arc light on 60Hz, flickers once for each half cycle (120Hz), and normally is not only 'on' at the peak of the cycle, but the whole time while the voltage is high enough (normally perhaps half or more of each half cycle). Then lights along a road, or on industrial buildings, are not all on one mains phase, but are arranged to keep the loading on the phases reasonably even. The result, is that there may be a small amount of flicker in intensity at 360Hz, but there is light more or less continuously... :-( Best Wishes |
#3
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![]() Roger Hamlett wrote: "Stephen G. Giannoni" wrote in message ... If much of the light pollution is from arc lighting, then there might be pulsation synchronized with the 60 Hz power grid. It might be possible to use a synchronized LCD panel as an effective filter. Unfortunately, you are unlikely to have much observing time left through such a filter... The problem is that an arc light on 60Hz, flickers once for each half cycle (120Hz), and normally is not only 'on' at the peak of the cycle, but the whole time while the voltage is high enough (normally perhaps half or more of each half cycle). Then lights along a road, or on industrial buildings, are not all on one mains phase, but are arranged to keep the loading on the phases reasonably even. The result, is that there may be a small amount of flicker in intensity at 360Hz, but there is light more or less continuously... :-( Best Wishes A co-worker told me that he looked through a wheel strobe Roger Hamlett wrote: "Stephen G. Giannoni" wrote in message ... If much of the light pollution is from arc lighting, then there might be pulsation synchronized with the 60 Hz power grid. It might be possible to use a synchronized LCD panel as an effective filter. Unfortunately, you are unlikely to have much observing time left through such a filter... The problem is that an arc light on 60Hz, flickers once for each half cycle (120Hz), and normally is not only 'on' at the peak of the cycle, but the whole time while the voltage is high enough (normally perhaps half or more of each half cycle). Then lights along a road, or on industrial buildings, are not all on one mains phase, but are arranged to keep the loading on the phases reasonably even. The result, is that there may be a small amount of flicker in intensity at 360Hz, but there is light more or less continuously... :-( Best Wishes ascope from Mt wilson down across the LA. area at night. His comment was that he expected to see the 120 hz phase distribution like patch work due to capacitor networks used to maximize the power transmission. If I recall, the 120 Hz flicker was not as broken up as he thought it would. it would be easy to built such device that would allow you to see the sky flicker. Years ago I participated in a measurement of the crab pulsar optical spectra with a strobe disk in front of the spectrograph. you could adjust the frequency and phase and thus see the pulsar on the tv camera monitor pulse. I commented that we were guiding in 4 dimensions as we needed to guide in ra, and dec, occasionally focus, and strobe wheel frequency. Dan |
#4
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SG From: Stephen G. Giannoni
SG Subject: Power Grid Blanking Filter SG Date: Sat, 12 Jul 2003 12:22:31 GMT SG Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net SG SG If much of the light pollution is from arc lighting, then there might SG be pulsation synchronized with the 60 Hz power grid. It might be SG possible to use a synchronized LCD panel as an effective filter. The other chap had most of the reasons this will not work. Two thers come to mind. First, the arc lighting (the 'vapor lamps' are tied to different pairs of the three-phase mains. On a particular street, they may fire in sequence from each pair. Blaming out one lamp, may simply loet light from other nearby ones come thru. The other is that, and I think you were joking a bit, an LCD screen is hardly an optical window at all. Even by direct eye, it is a diffusing window of no use for stargaxing. The lad who mentioned a wheel strobe hit on an idea that I heard of, and reported on, some years ago. A home astronomer was arriving at an airport on a orioeller plane. Out of his window he saw the twon beneath him thru the spinning prop baldes. Lo! He noticed that at certain instants, a lot o the lights seen thru the blades were blanked out. He sussed out that the baldes intercepted these lamps during their firing phase. Hence, he tried to build a chopper filter to fit on front of his scope to duplicate the propeller effect. He gave up rom the mechanics of the project. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
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