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Hi all.
I hust got one of those green laser pointers. Playing with this new toy, I "accidentially" happened to point it through my binoculars (of course, no one were using the binos at the time). When projecting the laser on the wall, there was an obvious pattern of tiny dots surrounding the "main" dot. I assume this pattern has something to do with the point spread function of the binoculars. The question is: Can such a simple test be used in practice to evaluate the quality of the optics? Rune |
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On Oct 18, 2:51 am, Rune Allnor wrote:
Hi all. I hust got one of those green laser pointers. Playing with this new toy, I "accidentially" happened to point it through my binoculars (of course, no one were using the binos at the time). When projecting the laser on the wall, there was an obvious pattern of tiny dots surrounding the "main" dot. I assume this pattern has something to do with the point spread function of the binoculars. The question is: Can such a simple test be used in practice to evaluate the quality of the optics? Rune It's nothing to do with the point spread function. What you are seeing are double bounce reflections off optical surfaces in the binoculars. www.richardfisher.com |
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![]() Rune Allnor wrote: Hi all. I hust got one of those green laser pointers. Playing with this new toy, I "accidentially" happened to point it through my binoculars (of course, no one were using the binos at the time). When projecting the laser on the wall, there was an obvious pattern of tiny dots surrounding the "main" dot. I assume this pattern has something to do with the point spread function of the binoculars. why would you jump to such an elaborate assumption. try any diffraction grating and see what happens. good luck. The question is: Can such a simple test be used in practice to evaluate the quality of the optics? Rune |
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On Oct 18, 12:51 am, Rune Allnor wrote:
snip When projecting the laser on the wall, there was an obvious pattern of tiny dots surrounding the "main" dot. . . . The question is: Can such a simple test be used in practice to evaluate the quality of the optics? - Rune I do not know whether a laser can be used as an aid in evaluating the optical quality of primary refractor objective or a mirror objective, for example if one were somehow used in conjunction with a Ronchi grating to project an image of the light passing through the grating and onto a wall. When passing a green laser pointer through a simple refractor, or when projecting a green laser pointer beam for 1000ft onto a piece of paper. I saw no similar projected dots. http://members.csolutions.net/fisher...tst/index.html - Canopus56 P.S. for lurkers. When using GLPs, safety comes first. Do not look directly at a GLP through optics. If you do not have enough experience to experiment with one - don't. |
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