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#1
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Hi all...
Was pondering my future retirement dreams and visions of a large telescope and observatory in some reasonably dark location in the southeast... By large I mean something in the 24 to 40 inch class.... Now it is apparent from some of the CCD pics amatuers have taken of the planets with more modest size scopes that they are able to reach darn close to the theoretical limits of resolution and contrast...ie in the .5 to .25 arc second range.... Butttt....these result from several things.....first modest size scopes ( 8 to 16 inches).....secondly...they can image for hours, days, even weeks to get a good planetary shot.....and thirdly....they take many FAST images where they "freeze" the seeing, pick the best looking of some fraction of them, and then combine that fraction for a final image.... Back to the large dream scope....lets say Im not really interested doing the planet imaging thing....Im more interested in CCD photometry, asteroid searches/astrometry, nova patrol, faint comets etc etc......now this kind of work (if your looking to be at all efficient about it) requires long exposures per frame...and the ability to use the majority of the frames taken....so now in addition to having a scope 2 to 5 times as large as what the planetary imagers use we also have the exact opposite in terms of exposure duration and required fraction of usable frames.... Sorry, getting to my point here....now I find it hard to imagine if I built a 40 inch scope and it was located somewhere near sea level in the southeast USA, that I would get anything remotely close to .1 arc second star images on CCD frames ranging anywhere from 30 seconds to many minute exposures (and lets assume seeing is our only problem....other problems such as tracking, scope vibrations, tube currents, overly warm observatory etc etc have been eliminated).... Now, my WAG is that such large scopes probably dont exceed .5 arc seconds imaging give or take the majority of the time...if that good... Anybody here with relatable experience or other WAGS? take care Blll |
#3
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![]() "BllFs6" wrote in message ... Hi all... Was pondering my future retirement dreams and visions of a large telescope and observatory in some reasonably dark location in the southeast... By large I mean something in the 24 to 40 inch class.... Now it is apparent from some of the CCD pics amatuers have taken of the planets with more modest size scopes that they are able to reach darn close to the theoretical limits of resolution and contrast...ie in the .5 to .25 arc second range.... Yep, the guys a dreamer. Dream on! "BllFs6" wrote in message ... Funny how no one ever asks them directly inspite of all the smoke and mirrors. People want answers from the hip, not the sky! Well....Id say tombos answers come from a stinky body part that is generally covered by 2 layers of clothing and is often massaged with toilet paper....(and hint...it aint the hip!) Blll I said people! Not the likes of you, whatever you are. Obviously your name is foreign around here which makes you a lurker, a troll, a nobody, and various other words that take some form of the 7 words you can't say on the radio or TV! |
#4
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Chris L Peterson wrote in message . ..
On 19 Mar 2004 14:52:53 GMT, (BllFs6) wrote: Sorry, getting to my point here....now I find it hard to imagine if I built a 40 inch scope and it was located somewhere near sea level in the southeast USA, that I would get anything remotely close to .1 arc second star images on CCD frames ranging anywhere from 30 seconds to many minute exposures (and lets assume seeing is our only problem....other problems such as tracking, scope vibrations, tube currents, overly warm observatory etc etc have been eliminated).... Now, my WAG is that such large scopes probably dont exceed .5 arc seconds imaging give or take the majority of the time...if that good... I don't believe I've ever seen a deep astroimage with 0.5" resolution. At very good sites, with good equipment (see, for example, what Adam Block is getting at Kitt Peak with a 20" RCOS on a Paramount- basically as good a setup as you can get) 2" is common, rarely pushing down towards 1". That's the best any scope, of any size, can do through the atmosphere (without using adaptive optics, which doesn't exist for amateurs except the for the trick of selecting from many frames). Also, if you want to do deep sky imaging, you'd be better off retiring to the southwest than the southeast g. Heh! What many (apparently) don't realize is the seeing conditions and arcsecond resolution at many of the professional observatories aren't as "good" as one might imagine. An interesting document that describes site selection and tests (with examples) can be found he snap.lbl.gov/pubdocs/Seeing_at_Observatories_v3.0.doc "LBL" = "Lawrence Berkeley Labs" A number of other fascinating articles can be found he http://www.llnl.gov/str/Indexlist.html such as: http://www.llnl.gov/str/Olivier.html concerning laser guide stars for adaptive optics. "LLNL" = "Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories" (the nuke lab :-) LLNL was instrumental setting up many observatories with adaptive optics using technology originally developed for SDI ("Star Wars"). |
#5
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Chris L Peterson wrote in message . ..
I don't believe I've ever seen a deep astroimage with 0.5" resolution. At very good sites, with good equipment (see, for example, what Adam Block is getting at Kitt Peak with a 20" RCOS on a Paramount- basically as good a setup as you can get) 2" is common, rarely pushing down towards 1". Soon Adam will have the possibility to use 32" RC from RCOS with ARIES' ION-BEAM figured optics with quality of RMS 0.015 wave. This should improve his photos significantly. Star images will be tighter. Valery Deryuzhin. ARIES. |
#6
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I don't believe I've ever seen a deep astroimage with 0.5" resolution.
At very good sites, with good equipment (see, for example, what Adam Block is getting at Kitt Peak with a 20" RCOS on a Paramount- basically as good a setup as you can get) 2" is common, rarely pushing down towards 1". In order to get down to 1 arc second, you will need more than a good mount. I found that in places of best seeing, where the full resoution of my 10" scope could be used (Florida Keys), the star image would be almost perfect at the highest power (900 to 1000X), but it would wander in a random manner as much a 3 arc seconds in a 5 second time period due to low frequency atmospheric disturbances. No mount can counter this type of motion. In order to achieve maximum resolution you will need to use an active device such as the SBIG AO7 unit. I believe Adam Block uses such a device in his images. In my case, I was able to achieve 1.2 arc seconds FWHM with the 10" Mak in the Keys by limiting my exposure time to 3 seconds and stacking a large number of exposures. Roland Christen |
#7
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On 19 Mar 2004 13:57:30 -0800, (ValeryD) wrote:
Soon Adam will have the possibility to use 32" RC from RCOS with ARIES' ION-BEAM figured optics with quality of RMS 0.015 wave. This should improve his photos significantly. Star images will be tighter. We'll see. I think his star images are essentially limited by his seeing, not his optics. I really doubt that the new telescope will produce significantly (or even noticeably) better star images. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
#8
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(Thad Floryan) wrote in message . com...
Chris L Peterson wrote in message . .. On 19 Mar 2004 14:52:53 GMT, (BllFs6) wrote: Sorry, getting to my point here....now I find it hard to imagine if I built a 40 inch scope and it was located somewhere near sea level in the southeast USA, that I would get anything remotely close to .1 arc second star images on CCD frames ranging anywhere from 30 seconds to many minute exposures (and lets assume seeing is our only problem....other problems such as tracking, scope vibrations, tube currents, overly warm observatory etc etc have been eliminated).... Now, my WAG is that such large scopes probably dont exceed .5 arc seconds imaging give or take the majority of the time...if that good... I don't believe I've ever seen a deep astroimage with 0.5" resolution. At very good sites, with good equipment (see, for example, what Adam Block is getting at Kitt Peak with a 20" RCOS on a Paramount- basically as good a setup as you can get) 2" is common, rarely pushing down towards 1". That's the best any scope, of any size, can do through the atmosphere (without using adaptive optics, which doesn't exist for amateurs except the for the trick of selecting from many frames). Also, if you want to do deep sky imaging, you'd be better off retiring to the southwest than the southeast g. Heh! What many (apparently) don't realize is the seeing conditions and arcsecond resolution at many of the professional observatories aren't as "good" as one might imagine. An interesting document that describes site selection and tests (with examples) can be found he snap.lbl.gov/pubdocs/Seeing_at_Observatories_v3.0.doc "LBL" = "Lawrence Berkeley Labs" A number of other fascinating articles can be found he http://www.llnl.gov/str/Indexlist.html such as: http://www.llnl.gov/str/Olivier.html concerning laser guide stars for adaptive optics. "LLNL" = "Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories" (the nuke lab :-) LLNL was instrumental setting up many observatories with adaptive optics using technology originally developed for SDI ("Star Wars"). Thanks for the links, Thad. I wasn't aware of the LBL public documents site before, but it looks like there is a lot of interesting stuff there. Clear skies. Erik socalsw |
#9
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On 19 Mar 2004 12:47:01 -0800, (Thad Floryan) wrote:
What many (apparently) don't realize is the seeing conditions and arcsecond resolution at many of the professional observatories aren't as "good" as one might imagine. And they are remarkably variable. A few sites in the Tucson area have some of the best seeing in the continental U.S. A few others, just a few miles from those, are much worse. Local conditions are very important. Of course, the southeast is generally regarded as having quite good seeing. But it also generally has poor transparency, making it less than ideal for deep sky imaging, where the improved S/N from clear, dark skies is valuable. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
#10
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Chris L Peterson wrote in message . ..
On 19 Mar 2004 13:57:30 -0800, (ValeryD) wrote: Soon Adam will have the possibility to use 32" RC from RCOS with ARIES' ION-BEAM figured optics with quality of RMS 0.015 wave. This should improve his photos significantly. Star images will be tighter. We'll see. I think his star images are essentially limited by his seeing, not his optics. I really doubt that the new telescope will produce significantly (or even noticeably) better star images. It will. If you compare images, taken with large scopes and smaller ones, you will see, that star images are tighter on photos with larger telescopes. This is due to lesser influence of diffraction on apertures in large instruments. Valery Deryuzhin. |
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