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Hi folks,
I recently read Stephen Tonkin's excellent book on amateur spectroscopy and that has really set the little grey cells working. Many years ago I happened aquire (for about 10 GBP), a very dead "Instrumentation Laboratory model 951 AE/AS spectrophotometer". In fact I always claimed it was a present for my wife, but she doesn't mind me taking it to pieces now.. The optical systems are all intact, though the detection system is late 1970s vintage. My question is simply, is it likely that it could form the basis of a fibre fed spectrograph ? Obviously it needs a new linear CCD array and some serious hacking, but is there any fundamental reason why it shouldn't be adaptable ? Comments, helpful preferably, would be much appreciated ! Steve |
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You had best take this to the Yahoo spectroscopy group
or ask Maurice Gavin as a start. At the least salvage the components and build something useful. kbl Steve wrote: Hi folks, I recently read Stephen Tonkin's excellent book on amateur spectroscopy and that has really set the little grey cells working. Many years ago I happened aquire (for about 10 GBP), a very dead "Instrumentation Laboratory model 951 AE/AS spectrophotometer". In fact I always claimed it was a present for my wife, but she doesn't mind me taking it to pieces now.. The optical systems are all intact, though the detection system is late 1970s vintage. My question is simply, is it likely that it could form the basis of a fibre fed spectrograph ? Obviously it needs a new linear CCD array and some serious hacking, but is there any fundamental reason why it shouldn't be adaptable ? Comments, helpful preferably, would be much appreciated ! Steve |
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Steve wrote:
Hi folks, I recently read Stephen Tonkin's excellent book on amateur spectroscopy and that has really set the little grey cells working. Many years ago I happened aquire (for about 10 GBP), a very dead "Instrumentation Laboratory model 951 AE/AS spectrophotometer". In fact I always claimed it was a present for my wife, but she doesn't mind me taking it to pieces now.. The optical systems are all intact, though the detection system is late 1970s vintage. My question is simply, is it likely that it could form the basis of a fibre fed spectrograph ? For what? For Astro-spectroscopy/graphy? Forget it. Obviously it needs a new linear CCD array and some serious hacking, but is there any fundamental reason why it shouldn't be adaptable ? Lab spectroscopes and astro-spectroscopes meet very different requirements both in terms of design and in terms of final utility. Lab spectroscopes depend on extended and very luminous sources, whereas astro-spectroscopes can operate with as little light as that of a single star at prime focus. Most of the astro-specs I've seen (Polaris, Granton), are direct vision scopes that screw directly onto your tube between scope and EP and weigh 10-20 grams. Contrast that with lab-specs which can weigh anywhere from 10 to 30 kgs. It is also expected that the receptors would be calibrated using a different sensitivity scale, if the scope is to be used for astrospectroscopy/graphy. In terms of cost and effectiveness, you could read Maurice Gavin's pages, buy some tape grating from Melles-Griot and construct a cheap spectroscopic EP for the cost of less than 10$. Passing the light through such an EP into your CCD, will give you some decent images, although don't expect commercial grade resolution abilities. If you want something sophisticated, you could buy a direct vision double-amici or a block of expensive (transparent) grating and collimate either one inside a shorty barlow, which could screw in directly between your scope and an EP. Comments, helpful preferably, would be much appreciated ! Steve -- I. N. G. --- http://users.forthnet.gr/ath/jgal/ |
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On Tue, 23 Nov 2004 17:14:20 +0000, Steve
wrote: Hi folks, I recently read Stephen Tonkin's excellent book on amateur spectroscopy and that has really set the little grey cells working. Many years ago I happened aquire (for about 10 GBP), a very dead "Instrumentation Laboratory model 951 AE/AS spectrophotometer". In fact I always claimed it was a present for my wife, but she doesn't mind me taking it to pieces now.. The optical systems are all intact, though the detection system is late 1970s vintage. My question is simply, is it likely that it could form the basis of a fibre fed spectrograph ? Obviously it needs a new linear CCD array and some serious hacking, but is there any fundamental reason why it shouldn't be adaptable ? Comments, helpful preferably, would be much appreciated ! Steve Hi Steve - I answered your direct email but for the forum - whilst visual stellar spectroscopy is pleasing [maybe a dozen or so stars reveal recognisable spectra] a CCD greatly increases the scope by orders of magnitude. WPO @ www.astroman.fsnet.co.uk |
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