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#1
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I'm currently using an 8" SCT and am wondering if a 10" or 11" would be
worth the investment considering my city viewpoint. Will a larger aperture penetrate a light polluted sky and see more objects, or just a brighter sky? |
#2
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Chuck wrote:
I'm currently using an 8" SCT and am wondering if a 10" or 11" would be worth the investment considering my city viewpoint. Will a larger aperture penetrate a light polluted sky and see more objects, or just a brighter sky? Generally Chuck, just more magnified light pollution.... Al is correct.... You can always substitute aperture with even more aperture; but there is NO substitute for clear, dark, steady skies. TW PS- if all else fails, you can always invest in one of them light pollution filters by Orion, and others. |
#3
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You will see more objects. But observing from a darker site will show even
more then a 10 or 11 inch scope. Lets assume you observe under a sky with nakede eye limit 4.5 with an 8" scope. Traveling to a site with mag 5.5 naked eye limit, the 8 inch scope will show the same (faint) objects as a 12.5 incher under mag 4.5 skies. -- Jan http://home.wanadoo.nl/jhm.vangastel/ "Chuck" schreef in bericht ... I'm currently using an 8" SCT and am wondering if a 10" or 11" would be worth the investment considering my city viewpoint. Will a larger aperture penetrate a light polluted sky and see more objects, or just a brighter sky? |
#4
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![]() "Chuck" wrote in message ... I'm currently using an 8" SCT and am wondering if a 10" or 11" would be worth the investment considering my city viewpoint. Will a larger aperture penetrate a light polluted sky and see more objects, or just a brighter sky? Oh god not this foolishness again. Larger scope shows more in all light pollution conditions period. x-- 100 Proof News - http://www.100ProofNews.com x-- 3,500+ Binary NewsGroups, and over 90,000 other groups x-- Access to over 800 Gigs/Day - $8.95/Month x-- UNLIMITED DOWNLOAD |
#5
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"Jan van Gastel" wrote in message ...
You will see more objects. But observing from a darker site will show even more then a 10 or 11 inch scope. Lets assume you observe under a sky with nakede eye limit 4.5 with an 8" scope. Traveling to a site with mag 5.5 naked eye limit, the 8 inch scope will show the same (faint) objects as a 12.5 incher under mag 4.5 skies. Actually, that is a best-case scenario; it overstates the benefits of aperture. Or, more precisely, understates the benefits of dark skies. The equation holds only for objects with very high surface brightness, notably stars (including stars in clusters) and many planetary nebulae. For objects where the limiting factor in visibility is low surface brightness, including most galaxies, the benefit of the extra aperture will be considerably less than that. In the extreme case, such as M101, which is very large and has very low surface brightness, the extra aperture probably won't help at all. More to the point, the view in the 8" scope under mag 5.5 skies will be *qualitatively* better than the view in the 11" scope under mag 4.5 skies. Most of the brighter galaxies and nebulae will be visible in both conditions, but the smaller scope under darker skies will show subtle features that are invisible under brighter skies regardless of how much aperture you throw at them. However, under identical skies, the 11" scope will usually perform better than the 8" scope, often much better, and will only perform worse in the fairly rare case of an object that doesn't fit into the FOV of the larger scope, such as NGC 7000, the North America Nebula. - Tony Flanders |
#6
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"GO VOLS!" wrote:
"Chuck" wrote in message ... I'm currently using an 8" SCT and am wondering if a 10" or 11" would be worth the investment considering my city viewpoint. Will a larger aperture penetrate a light polluted sky and see more objects, or just a brighter sky? Oh god not this foolishness again. Larger scope shows more in all light pollution conditions period. Not true. It depends on several factors, especially the characteristics of the object. See Tony Flander's remarks for an experienced opinion. Mike Simmons |
#7
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Tony,
You're the expert on observing under such conditions, AFAIC. I'd just like to second your remarks based on some experience using small and large telescopes under varying conditions of light pollution. Bigger is generally better but light pollution can change the equation. The big scopes are just not suited for some large, low-surface brightness objects in light polluted conditions but generalizations (in generalg) can't be made because there are several competing factors. Mike Simmons Tony Flanders wrote: "Jan van Gastel" wrote in message ... You will see more objects. But observing from a darker site will show even more then a 10 or 11 inch scope. Lets assume you observe under a sky with nakede eye limit 4.5 with an 8" scope. Traveling to a site with mag 5.5 naked eye limit, the 8 inch scope will show the same (faint) objects as a 12.5 incher under mag 4.5 skies. Actually, that is a best-case scenario; it overstates the benefits of aperture. Or, more precisely, understates the benefits of dark skies. The equation holds only for objects with very high surface brightness, notably stars (including stars in clusters) and many planetary nebulae. For objects where the limiting factor in visibility is low surface brightness, including most galaxies, the benefit of the extra aperture will be considerably less than that. In the extreme case, such as M101, which is very large and has very low surface brightness, the extra aperture probably won't help at all. More to the point, the view in the 8" scope under mag 5.5 skies will be *qualitatively* better than the view in the 11" scope under mag 4.5 skies. Most of the brighter galaxies and nebulae will be visible in both conditions, but the smaller scope under darker skies will show subtle features that are invisible under brighter skies regardless of how much aperture you throw at them. However, under identical skies, the 11" scope will usually perform better than the 8" scope, often much better, and will only perform worse in the fairly rare case of an object that doesn't fit into the FOV of the larger scope, such as NGC 7000, the North America Nebula. - Tony Flanders |
#8
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But it seems relatively fair to say that "for the vast majority of objects
visible in amateur telescopes" more aperture _is_ better. In particular, if an object is visible in a smaller aperture under a given sky brightness, then it should be more visible with larger aperture. It is those objects that are not visible with the smaller aperture that are in question, and these will invariably appear even better with larger under darker. At least that's what I base my decision on. The ability to see better, those that are visible, and those that are just detectable where I use my current scope. -- -Stephen Paul "Mike Simmons" wrote in message ... Tony, You're the expert on observing under such conditions, AFAIC. I'd just like to second your remarks based on some experience using small and large telescopes under varying conditions of light pollution. Bigger is generally better but light pollution can change the equation. The big scopes are just not suited for some large, low-surface brightness objects in light polluted conditions but generalizations (in generalg) can't be made because there are several competing factors. Mike Simmons Tony Flanders wrote: "Jan van Gastel" wrote in message ... You will see more objects. But observing from a darker site will show even more then a 10 or 11 inch scope. Lets assume you observe under a sky with nakede eye limit 4.5 with an 8" scope. Traveling to a site with mag 5.5 naked eye limit, the 8 inch scope will show the same (faint) objects as a 12.5 incher under mag 4.5 skies. Actually, that is a best-case scenario; it overstates the benefits of aperture. Or, more precisely, understates the benefits of dark skies. The equation holds only for objects with very high surface brightness, notably stars (including stars in clusters) and many planetary nebulae. For objects where the limiting factor in visibility is low surface brightness, including most galaxies, the benefit of the extra aperture will be considerably less than that. In the extreme case, such as M101, which is very large and has very low surface brightness, the extra aperture probably won't help at all. More to the point, the view in the 8" scope under mag 5.5 skies will be *qualitatively* better than the view in the 11" scope under mag 4.5 skies. Most of the brighter galaxies and nebulae will be visible in both conditions, but the smaller scope under darker skies will show subtle features that are invisible under brighter skies regardless of how much aperture you throw at them. However, under identical skies, the 11" scope will usually perform better than the 8" scope, often much better, and will only perform worse in the fairly rare case of an object that doesn't fit into the FOV of the larger scope, such as NGC 7000, the North America Nebula. - Tony Flanders |
#9
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In article ,
Stephen Paul wrote: But it seems relatively fair to say that "for the vast majority of objects visible in amateur telescopes" more aperture _is_ better. Indeed true, since the vast majority of objects visible in amateur as well as professional telescopes are faint stars and faint galaxies..... OTOH most sky observers enjoy observing a particular kind of objects, not just the most common objects.... :-) -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://www.stjarnhimlen.se/ http://home.tiscali.se/pausch/ |
#10
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Hi Stephen,
I don't mean to suggest that bigger isn't better when all other factors are equal. I've been trying to dispel that myth for a long time. The only problem occurs when the bigger scope has a focal length that is so much longer that the "all other factors being equal" phrase that's usually applied isn't applicable. If you can use the same magnification (and FOV) then bigger is always better, in my experience. If an object gets so big that it gets lost in the field, e.g., if it goes out of the field leaving only inner, low-contrast portions in the field, then the bigger scope can be worse. It's the same thing that happens when you're enjoying a great view of M31 in big binoculars and then go to a scope that only shows you a small portion of the galaxy that doesn't have enough contrast features to be interesting (unless it's a really big scope!). It's not that the bigger scope doesn't do as well, it's just that it does something different that isn't as suited for a light polluted sky on some objects, i.e., those features it shows might not show up well against a bright background whereas the whole galaxy still comes through with the binoculars. To borrow from Tony's example, if I was going to observe the North American Nebula in a light polluted sky I wouldn't choose a very large light bucket that can't get below 200x. At least if it's dark I know I can see some detail in the nebula that isn't visible in a smaller scope (though not the whole thing) but in a light-polluted sky it's going to be tough to see anything at all standing out from the bright background if all that's in the FOV is a wisp fine detail. If it was possible to have the larger scope and retain the magnification and FOV of the smaller scope then that would be anyone's choice, light pollution or not! I'm convinced it would *always* be better. But then you start getting an exit pupil that's bigger than the entrance pupil of our own optical system (the eye). Too bad we can't stuff all the light from the entire field of the Keck into our eye. I hope that makes sense. :-) Mike Simmons Stephen Paul wrote: But it seems relatively fair to say that "for the vast majority of objects visible in amateur telescopes" more aperture _is_ better. In particular, if an object is visible in a smaller aperture under a given sky brightness, then it should be more visible with larger aperture. It is those objects that are not visible with the smaller aperture that are in question, and these will invariably appear even better with larger under darker. At least that's what I base my decision on. The ability to see better, those that are visible, and those that are just detectable where I use my current scope. -- -Stephen Paul "Mike Simmons" wrote in message ... Tony, You're the expert on observing under such conditions, AFAIC. I'd just like to second your remarks based on some experience using small and large telescopes under varying conditions of light pollution. Bigger is generally better but light pollution can change the equation. The big scopes are just not suited for some large, low-surface brightness objects in light polluted conditions but generalizations (in generalg) can't be made because there are several competing factors. Mike Simmons Tony Flanders wrote: "Jan van Gastel" wrote in message ... You will see more objects. But observing from a darker site will show even more then a 10 or 11 inch scope. Lets assume you observe under a sky with nakede eye limit 4.5 with an 8" scope. Traveling to a site with mag 5.5 naked eye limit, the 8 inch scope will show the same (faint) objects as a 12.5 incher under mag 4.5 skies. Actually, that is a best-case scenario; it overstates the benefits of aperture. Or, more precisely, understates the benefits of dark skies. The equation holds only for objects with very high surface brightness, notably stars (including stars in clusters) and many planetary nebulae. For objects where the limiting factor in visibility is low surface brightness, including most galaxies, the benefit of the extra aperture will be considerably less than that. In the extreme case, such as M101, which is very large and has very low surface brightness, the extra aperture probably won't help at all. More to the point, the view in the 8" scope under mag 5.5 skies will be *qualitatively* better than the view in the 11" scope under mag 4.5 skies. Most of the brighter galaxies and nebulae will be visible in both conditions, but the smaller scope under darker skies will show subtle features that are invisible under brighter skies regardless of how much aperture you throw at them. However, under identical skies, the 11" scope will usually perform better than the 8" scope, often much better, and will only perform worse in the fairly rare case of an object that doesn't fit into the FOV of the larger scope, such as NGC 7000, the North America Nebula. - Tony Flanders |
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