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Subject: Is image problem due to mirror?
From: (Doc) Date: 22/08/03 14:05 Romance Daylight Time Message-id: I've been experimenting with a Meade 5" reflector, and find that the Moon looks incredible, but when looking at Mars, with anything of greater mag power than the 25mm eyepiece such as a 9mm or 4mm, the image even at sharpest focus I can manage has traces of an irregularity most noticeable around the edges, sort of like an impressionist painting. Is this likely caused by imperfections in the mirror being magnified or something else? Whilst it may be a mirror problem or eyepiece quality problem or a collimation problem, I don't think anybody mentioned the possibility that your scope was warm. It takes quite a while for the optics and mount to cool down after a warm day even when it is kept in the shade, and this can cause prominent air currents to distort the image. If the tube is almost horizontal the "flare" often appears to one side of the image as the warm air rises inside the tube and flows out of the open end. If you defocuss the image or remove the eyepiece and look into the focusser, you may even see the moving currents. Phil |
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