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Confused Amatuer
On Thu, 28 Aug 2003 13:55:10 -0400, Trail Shredder wrote:
I just bought a Celestron Telescope, mainly to help educate the kids and check out Mars. I checked out Mars last night and just wasn't impressed. I have had people tell me that they could see details with a pair of Binoculars. It didn't look much more different than with the naked eye. I figured out that the scope has a focal length of 700mm and I had in a 4mm eyepiece. So I guess my magnification power is 700/4=175. Is that correct? Is there something that I might be doing wrong? It also seemed hard to determine when it was in focus. At one time it was huge but looked very blurred, once it looked in focus, it was small as if I wasn't looking through the scope. It has an alignment thing with it too and they assume you know where these stars are.....Is there a simple guide to finding these stars? Thanks in advance, Brian Your math is right. Even at 175x Mars isn't going to show a huge disk. One has to be patient and watch for while; let your eyes get trained in seeing small details. It still won't look like the Nasa pics, but with experience you should be able to at least pick out the polar cap and maybe some larger features. Try here http://www.starizona.com/ccd/settinguppolar.htm - worked for my kids anyway. Cheers! Enjoy your scope! DarkHills [[[Pan: The Galactic Gargle-Blaster of Newsreaders]]] |
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"Trail Shredder" wrote in
: I just bought a Celestron Telescope, mainly to help educate the kids and check out Mars. I checked out Mars last night and just wasn't impressed. I have had people tell me that they could see details with a pair of Binoculars. I certainly don't believe this is possible with any hand held binoculars. Of course there are binoculars that have 125mm objectives and changable eyepieces but they are certainly not hand held. It didn't look much more different than with the naked eye. I figured out that the scope has a focal length of 700mm and I had in a 4mm eyepiece. So I guess my magnification power is 700/4=175. Is that correct? Yes. What is the aperture of your scope?. A rule of thumb says max useful magnification is about 50 x per inch or 2 x per mm. Is there something that I might be doing wrong? It also seemed hard to determine when it was in focus. At one time it was huge but looked very blurred, once it looked in focus, it was small as if I wasn't looking through the scope. It has an alignment thing with it too and they assume you know where these stars are.....Is there a simple guide to finding these stars? Your problem could just be atmospheric conditions caused by turbulent air .. If you are in the northern hemisphere, Mars doesn't get to a very good altitude for this particular opposition - that means you are having to look through more of the earth's turbulent air. If you see stars that are wildly twinkling to the maked eye, then you can be sure that the seeing conditions will be bad through a telescope. As to your other question, i.e identifying alignment stars, they are normally fairly bright ones, you just need to learn to identify them. I would suggest a few things to help: 1. Download a planetarium program. You tell the program your location and the time and date and it will show what your local sky will look like, identifying various stars etc. You could try the demo version of Skymap Pro at www.skymap.com or the completely free, Cartes Du Ceil at www.stargazing.net/astropc/. You can use these to help learn the constellations and bright stars. 2. Join your local astronomy club or society - there will be plenty of people there who can help you. 3. Get the book called "Turn Left at Orion" - I don't recall the name of the author right now but it is a good book to help learn your way around the sky. Regards Llanzlan Thanks in advance, Brian |
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