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![]() nick wrote: VcDy wrote: Why, would a 16" lx200 be stingy in its color delivery vs. a 17" f/4.5 Coulter (which is great) ? Is there something about the sct design which inherently retracts colour delivery vs say larger refractors, newts, and maksutovs. Several have suggested its the size of the sct at question... SCT color error does increase in proportion to its aperture. For a common commercial configuration (f/2/10, neutral zone at 0.866 radius) chromatic blur diameter is given approximately by dD/73 in mm, with "d" being the difference in refractive index vs. that for which the corrector is optimized, and D the aperture diameter. So a 16" SCT has chromatic blurs larger by a factor of 2 vs. an 8". Also, SCT corrector with the 0.866 radius neutral zone is optimized for photography, not visual. It brings together best focus for the optimized wavelength and circles of least confusion of other colors. While the circle of least confusion is smallest of all blurs between paraxial and marginal foci, it has twice the wavefront error of the so called "best" or "diffraction" focus, which is a common focus for other (than the optimized) colors when the neutral zone is at 0.707 radius. For instance, a 16" f/2/10 SCT with 0.866 radius neutral zone, corrector refractive index ~1.5 at the optimized ~550nm, would have ~0.016mm blur diameter in the blue F-line (d~0.003) and ~0.027mm blur diameter in the red C-line (d~0.005). It translates into 1/5 wave wavefront error in the blue, and 1/3.1 wavefront error in the red. Should the neutral zone be placed at 0.707 radius, the color wavefront errors would be 1/10 wave and 1/6.2 wave, respectively. Obviously, even at 16" aperture, the color error is still relatively small, even more so considering lowered eye sensitivity. It may affect color saturation of smallest resolvable low-contrast details, but not likely very significantly. More likely culprit for lower color saturation over an entire object is a higher amount of scattered light There we go. This is a beautiful analysis Vlad - Thanks. So the obvious place one can go is to baffling and any ordianry thing one can do to improve contrast. Thanks - Jerry (from rough surfaces and/or and compromised glass homogeneity of the corrector), and less efficient baffling. Vlad |
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