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Can anyone explain how light really passes through a telescope???
Opinions I've heard seem contradictory so I'd appreciate some clarification. In particular (and this is the practical reason for asking the question) when light exits an eyepiece does it emerge as a cylinder or as a cone? If a cone is it narrowing - i.e. focussed on a point after the eyepiece - or is it diverging - i.e. already past the point of focus? My local telescope supplier tells me the light is converging but I doubt the human eye could focus on that. My view is that the light should emerge as a cylinder (i.e. appearing at infinity) of diameter up to the size of the pupil of the eye and that the lens of the eye focusses this on to the retina just as it would when viewing a distant object. The counterexample he gave is of eye relief where the distance from the eyepiece matters. I guess there is something in that so am puzzled. Can anyone shed some light (sic, sorry) on this? -- Thanks, James |
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"James Harris" wrote:
In particular (and this is the practical reason for asking the question) when light exits an eyepiece does it emerge as a cylinder or as a cone? The light exiting the eyepiece converges until reaching the exit pupil. The diameter of the exit pupil is equal to the telescope's effective aperture divided by the magnification of the telescope/eyepiece combination. The light diverges as it moves further from the eyepiece than the exit pupil. Willie R. Meghar |
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James Harris wrote:
Can anyone explain how light really passes through a telescope??? Opinions I've heard seem contradictory so I'd appreciate some clarification. In particular (and this is the practical reason for asking the question) when light exits an eyepiece does it emerge as a cylinder or as a cone? If a cone is it narrowing - i.e. focussed on a point after the eyepiece - or is it diverging - i.e. already past the point of focus? My local telescope supplier tells me the light is converging but I doubt the human eye could focus on that. Can you see the whole of your monitor without moving your eyes? Most people can. Trace the lines from the edges of the monitor to your eye and you'll see that the human eye can indeed focus a converging light cone. Tim |
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Tim Auton wrote:
Can you see the whole of your monitor without moving your eyes? Most people can. Trace the lines from the edges of the monitor to your eye and you'll see that the human eye can indeed focus a converging light cone. Uhh, no. Think about how you see an individual pixel. Light rays emanate from that pixel and are focused by your eye to a point on your retina. Light from another pixel diverges from *that* pixel and is focused to a second point on your retina. And so on. Your eye does not take light from the entire screen and focus that down to a point; that would mix the light from the whole screen, which would produce an indiscriminate blur, if in fact your eyes could do it. Your eye lenses are convex. They cannot focus light that converges strongly--certainly not anything that would converge to your retina without the lens being there. At best, they can focus very weakly converging light. Fortunately, most objects emit only diverging light; it takes an optical element, such as a magnifying glass, to produce converging light. That is why you only see a blur if you look around the room with a magnifying glass held up to your eye. -- Brian Tung The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html |
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James Harris wrote:
Can anyone explain how light really passes through a telescope??? Opinions I've heard seem contradictory so I'd appreciate some clarification. In particular (and this is the practical reason for asking the question) when light exits an eyepiece does it emerge as a cylinder or as a cone? If a cone is it narrowing - i.e. focussed on a point after the eyepiece - or is it diverging - i.e. already past the point of focus? My local telescope supplier tells me the light is converging but I doubt the human eye could focus on that. My view is that the light should emerge as a cylinder (i.e. appearing at infinity) of diameter up to the size of the pupil of the eye and that the lens of the eye focusses this on to the retina just as it would when viewing a distant object. The counterexample he gave is of eye relief where the distance from the eyepiece matters. I guess there is something in that so am puzzled. Can anyone shed some light (sic, sorry) on this? I hope so. I'm going to explain everything in terms of a refractor, with lenses for both objective and eyepiece, but a similar explanation holds for any design. Suppose you point a telescope at a star. In the ray conception of light, rays diverge from the star, but the star is so far away that by the time the light reaches your telescope, the rays that enter your telescope are as good as parallel. Since your objective is generally circular, a cylinder of light from the star is what goes in. The objective then refracts this cylinder into a cone, which converges to a point at the focal plane. Since there's nothing there to stop the light, it diverges again in a second, smaller cone, which terminates at the eyepiece. The eyepiece refracts this light a second time into a cylinder again, and it is this cylinder that your eye lens (and cornea) refract a third time into a third cone, whose point lies, hopefully, on your retina, at which point your brain processes the signal into a mental picture of the star. Now, for a star at the center of the field of view, all the cones and cylinders have an axis of symmetry that is identical with the axis of the telescope itself. This is what you typically see in telescope cutaway diagrams. The situation is somewhat different for stars at the edge of the field. Suppose that you point your telescope slightly above the star. In that case, the cylinder of light is a bit askew; when it reaches the objective, it does so "from below," relative to the scope's axis, and the light is moving slightly upward. The objective refracts it into a cone of light, but the cone of light is also pointed slightly upward, so that it converges to a point on the focal plane that is slightly higher than before. The diverging cone is also still headed upward, and it reaches the eyepiece well above center. The periphery of an eyepiece refracts light more than its center, since the angles are steeper there. The eyepiece refracts the diverging cone into a cylinder, as before, but now the cylinder starts from the top of the eyepiece and is heading *downward*. That is why images in a refractor (without a star diagonal) are inverted; light entering the objective from below exits the eyepiece from above. This means that if you have stars all over the field of view, each one generates a final cylinder of light emanating from the eyepiece. Each cylinder starts from a different circular base on the eyepiece--else, the stars would appear to coincide--but since the ones near the top are headed downward, and the ones near the bottom are headed upward, they all converge to a disc. This disc is separated from the eyepiece by a distance called the *eye relief*. It is at this distance that it is easiest to fit all the light cylinders into your eye's pupil, so that one can see *all* the stars (or more generally, the entire field of view). This explains why eye position is so critical when using low power. If you use high power, the exit pupil is small because the cylinders are so small. The eye relief is the same, but since the cylinders are thin, you can be too far forward, backward, or off to the side, and the cylinders still all get into your eye, allowing you to see the entire image. It is at low power where the cylinders are so wide that any individual one barely gets into your eye in the first place. Any kind of misalignment, and many of them simply won't get in, and you see a black splotch over part of the field of view. Hope that helped. Let me know if you have any further questions. -- Brian Tung The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html |
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Brian Tung wrote:
[snip excellent explanation] Just to expand on this with a diagram, the light from a single star would follow the path shown in the diagram at the top of: http://www.astunit.com/tutorials/telescope.htm If you now imagine a star below the optical axis, its rays would form a pattern symmetrical with that shown in the diagram, the line of symmetry being the optical axis (grey horizontal line). You will see that the bundles of rays from the two stars cross each other on the eye side of the eyepiece. The smallest circle through which they all pass is the position of the exit pupil. (It is in the position of the image of the objective formed by the eyepiece.) |
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James Harris wrote:
Can anyone explain how light really passes through a telescope??? snip My local telescope supplier tells me the light is converging but I doubt the human eye could focus on that. My view is that the light should emerge as a cylinder You are both right. The image of extended objects like the Moon are not formed only by a single bundle of parallel rays coming down the telescope tube and out the eyepiece. Such a cylinder of parallel light rays does exist. You can see it by focusing a telescope on the Moon and then standing up to two feet behind the eyepiece. You can still see a dim image of the Moon in the eyepiece. But there are two other key parallel beams of light traveling through telescope that do come to a convergent focus. Extended objects like the Moon, by definition, have an arcsecond size. For an extended object like the Moon that size is about 1800 arcseconds. Some of the bundles of parallel beams of light rays come from center of the object - that is your cylinder of light - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope1.gif - but some come from one side of the object at a slight angle of divergence to the optical axis - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope4.gif At the intersection where these bundles of parallel light meet on the observer side of the eyepiece - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope5.gif - is where the virtual image of the extended object forms - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope7.gif The distance between this virtual image and the eyepiece is the eyepiece's eye relief distance. You can see this effect by again focusing a telescope on the Moon. When you stand back from the eyepiece there is a dim image formed by the parallel set of rays travelling directly down optical axis of the telescope. If you move your eye to the eyepiece at the eye relief distance, more of the light beams with an angular divergence will enter your eye pupil. The image will be brighter. I recommend that you take a few minutes to play with a telescope ray tracing Javascript applet, put on the web by Professor Mark Peterson of Mount Holyoke College - http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~mpeterso/c...twolenses.html Using this ray tracing simulater, you can put three bundles of parallel light through the telescope and angle two of them with respect optical axis. Put one on the optical axis, a second parallel to the top of the lens and a third parallel to the bottom of the lens. Do this by - 1) Selecting the "astronomical telescope" link to put a telescope in the simulator. 2) Use the "Beam" button, to add two beams. 3) Once selected, there are drag "dots" on the beams that allow you to position and angle them with respect to the optical axis. 4) After you are practiced at using the simulater add a virtual eye and retina using the "add an 'eye' at the far right" link below the simulator window. (I found easier to create the desired simulation by manually adding another lens at the far right using the "Lens" button and a field stop using the "Aperature" button.) When using the Mark Peterson lens and telescope simulator, the following is a screen shot of the type of telescope and eye you want to try to create: http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope8.jpg The apparent-field-of-view (AFOV) in the eyepiece is itself an extended object of sorts. Peace - Canopus56 |
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canopus56 wrote:
To correct text: snip At the intersection where these bundles of parallel light meet on the observer side of the eyepiece - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope5.gif - is where the virtual image of the extended object forms - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope7.gif The distance between this virtual image and the eyepiece is the eyepiece's eye relief distance. should read - At the intersection where these bundles of parallel light meet on the observer side of the eyepiece - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope5.gif - is where the _real_ image of the extended object forms - http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...Telescope7.gif The distance between this _real_ image and the eyepiece is the eyepiece's eye relief distance. - Canopus56 |
#9
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![]() James Harris wrote: Can anyone explain how light really passes through a telescope??? Opinions I've heard seem contradictory so I'd appreciate some clarification. In particular (and this is the practical reason for asking the question) when light exits an eyepiece does it emerge as a cylinder or as a cone? If a cone is it narrowing - i.e. focussed on a point after the eyepiece - or is it diverging - i.e. already past the point of focus? My local telescope supplier tells me the light is converging but I doubt the human eye could focus on that. My view is that the light should emerge as a cylinder (i.e. appearing at infinity) of diameter up to the size of the pupil of the eye and that the lens of the eye focusses this on to the retina just as it would when viewing a distant object. The counterexample he gave is of eye relief where the distance from the eyepiece matters. I guess there is something in that so am puzzled. Can anyone shed some light (sic, sorry) on this? -- Thanks, James Hi james, check it out yourself, try focussing on the moon then hold a piece of frosted glass or tracing paper behind the eyepiece. Does the image diameter increase as you move the screen further from the eyepiece ? jc |
#10
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![]() "John Carruthers" wrote in message oups.com... James Harris wrote: Can anyone explain how light really passes through a telescope??? Opinions I've heard seem contradictory so I'd appreciate some clarification. In particular (and this is the practical reason for asking the question) when light exits an eyepiece does it emerge as a cylinder or as a cone? If a cone is it narrowing - i.e. focussed on a point after the eyepiece - or is it diverging - i.e. already past the point of focus? Hi james, check it out yourself, try focussing on the moon then hold a piece of frosted glass or tracing paper behind the eyepiece. Does the image diameter increase as you move the screen further from the eyepiece ? jc James The light from the distant object should be emerging in a parallel sided cylinder when the telescope is correctly focussed at a distant object. John I'm not sure what 'image' you would get using the method described - I suspect the nearest to an image you could bring to focus would be that of the Objective behind the eyepiece. |
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