HOW CAMERA, BINOCULAR AND TELESCOPE OPTICS WORK
-BY ALBERT NAGLER
PRES. TELE VUE OPTICS
Let's discuss the meaning of the specifications usually supplied so the easily
understood concepts can be applied to telescopes, which often have confusing, if
not misleading specs and jargon.
CAMERAS
Camera lenses have two major specifications, focal length and f/#.
1. FOCAL LENGTH
The focal length determines the size of the image on the film. If we consider a
zoom lens you know that the 35mm setting is "wide angle", 50mm
is" normal" and 135mm is "telephoto." Focal length, for a
given film size (such as 35mm) determines the "field of view", a
specification usually ignored or unstated directly. " Field of view"
is of course the angle of view seen in the real world and is inversely
proportional to focal length. The 135mm setting has the highest magnification
and smallest field, while the 35mm setting has the lowest magnification and the
largest field, in fact almost 4 times the field size (135/35) and 16 times the
field area!
Many people of course confuse f/# and focal length and think that a change in
the f/# setting affects the image size in some magical way. It's only the focal
length that affects image size and field size.
2. FOCAL RATIO, OR f/#
Usually written as a ratio, (1:2 for example, on the lens barrel means f/2),
this gives the "fatness" of the cone of light that reaches the film.
"Fatter" cone, more light, faster exposure. f/# is actually the ratio
of the focal length to the effective diameter of the lens. A 50mm f/2 lens has
an effective lens diameter of 25 mm. ( Remember that 25.4 mm equals 1 inch - a
useful fact when we discuss telescopes, where lens diameter is sometimes given
in inches and the focal length in millimeters.)
Most people instinctively appreciate that an f/2 lens is faster than an f/4, but
may not know that it's 4 times faster! Also, there's a misconception that the
f/2 lens is sharper. (Theoretically possible, but rare in practice.)
While f/# is a critical specification for cameras, where f/#, film speed and
subject brightness are exposure variables, we shall see that it has no direct
effect on brightness of images viewed through a telescope. A shocking statement
to my photographer friends who've recently become "telescope nuts."
A big thank you now to the binocular industry, which has developed meaningful
product specifications, never, ever mentioning f/ratios.
BlNOCULARS
Not everyone thinks of binoculars as 2 parallel telescopes, but it sure is handy
when explaining how a telescope works. Neglecting the prisms which turn the
image right-side up, the binoculars consist of an objective to form an image
just like a camera lens, and a magnifier to view the image directly instead of
film to capture the image. We call the magnifier an eyepiece, or ocular.
The ratio (there's that word again) of the focal length of the objective to
focal length of the eyepiece gives the magnification or power of the binocular
or telescope.
BINOCULAR SPECS
6 x30, 7 x35, 7 x50, 10 x50 etc. How nice to have meaningful specs without
confusing f/#'s. A 7x35 means 7 power having a 35mm objective lens aperture
(diameter). Notice that nobody said it's 7 power because the objective has a
focal length 7 times that of the eyepiece, or that maybe it came from a 140mm
focal length objective used with a 20mm focal length eyepiece. Or, that the
140mm objective with a 35mm diameter means it's an f/4 (who cares? but these are
interesting facts when we discuss telescopes more fully.)
The aperture specification is very meaningful but indirectly, because the
aperture divided by the magnification gives the "exit pupil" diameter:
35mm aperture divided by 7 power = 5mm exit pupil. A 7x50 binocular has a 7.1 mm
exit pupil. So what? Well, while f/# gives a relative measure of image
brightness for a camera, the exit pupil compared to your own eye's pupil,
determines the image brightness in binoculars. The exit pupil is the little
circle of light you see when you hold the binocular away from your eye. The
circle is actually the image of the objective, that is formed by the eyepiece.
1. PUPIL SIZE
No, we're not in the school nurse's office! The human eye pupil is 2 to 3mm in
diameter in daylight and goes up to 7mm at night when the eye is dark adapted.
If the binocular exit pupil is at least as large as your pupil, the image will
be about as bright as a normal view. If smaller, then the brightness is
diminished by the ratio (there I go again) of the area of the exit pupil to that
of the eye. A 7 x35 binocular will be just as bright as a 7 x50 in the daylight
when your eye pupil is smaller than 5mm, but at night, the 7x50 will appear
(50/35) squared = twice as bright!
2. FIELD OF VIEW
Another binocular specification describes how much field you actually see. More
complex eyepieces allow a greater area of image to be seen, almost like a camera
using a bigger piece of film. For example, a simple eyepiece will show 390 ft.
at 1000 yards, while a more complex one might reveal 496 ft. at 1000 yards,
under the same magnification.
Beware though. The larger field usually shows fuzzier images toward the edge.
For viewing astronomical subjects, the field size can hardly be measured at 1000
yards, so we have to convert the specs to true field angles: 390 ft. at 1000
yards equals 7 degrees. That's the true field. Since the binocular magnifies 7
times, the field appears about 50 degrees in the eyepiece. The larger field
eyepiece produces an apparent field of 65 degrees in the eyepiece: Every
eyepiece has its own fixed apparent field.
We can see that a binocular has magnification, aperture, an exit pupil, a real
field of view and an apparent field, all interrelated mathematically.
THE TELESCOPE
What does a telescope have that half a binocular doesn't: Flexibility - with
interchangeable eyepieces with different focal lengths so almost any power can
be obtained. Brightness: while most consumer binoculars have between 1 and 2
inches aperture, telescopes have 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10 or more inches aperture, so
there's ample exit pupil for bright images at higher powers. Resolution: higher
power, up to a point, shows greater detail. Detail is limited by the quality of
manufacture, aperture, and turbulence in our atmosphere. In practice, about 50
power per inch of aperture is the upper practical limit.
For telescopes larger than 4 inches, the atmosphere generally limits detail, so
powers above 200 or 300 largely magnify the turbulent fuzzy images. So why have
large aperture telescopes? Because the "light bucket" capability shows
stars vastly brighter and more numerous. Serious amateur astronomers and
astrophotographers are usually aperture hungry to see faint galaxies, gas clouds
and star clusters. For the less dedicated or beginning crowd, a small scope, up
to about 5 inches, will show the rings of Saturn, belts of Jupiter, lunar
craters and many "double stars" extremely well.
Unfortunately, many small telescopes are mere toys, but are promoted as high
power instruments. A 250 power telescope with a 2" (50mm) diameter lens, on
a flimsy mount is guaranteed to frustrate the beginner.
Generally, the lowest power is most often used. Since the magnification is given
by the objective focal length divided by the eyepiece focal length, the longest
focal length eyepiece possible will give the lowest power, widest field, largest
exit pupil and brightest image for use as a spotting scope. The lowest useful
power is about 3 or 4 per inch of telescope aperture.
EYEPIECE TYPES
In general, telescopes with fast (f/4 to f/6) objectives require more
sophisticated eyepieces for sharp imaging, particularly at the edge of the
field. Modern multi-coated eyepieces come in a wide range of focal lengths. The
best eyepieces have at least 4 elements. Plossl types are excellent for apparent
fields up to 50 degrees, while more complex types have fields of 65 degrees, or
even more than 80 degrees apparent field. To compare apparent fields, simply
hold 2 eyepieces close to your eye so you can see the circular edge of the
field, called appropriately, the field stop. Position the eyepiece so the
circles overlap, as in binoculars. Whichever appears larger, is actually larger.
The widest apparent fields offer eye-opening " spacewalk" viewing.
There are 3 standard eyepiece diameters common today; .96" O.D., 1.25"
O.D. and 2" O.D. The .96" is most used in small imported refracting
telescopes. There's much more variety and quality in the increasingly
universally accepted 1.25" standard size. Many larger or more advanced
instruments accept 2" O.D. eyepieces for the very largest field possible.
Of course, smaller eyepiece sizes can be adapted to larger, but not the other
way round, except for 1 1/4" to .96".
TELESCOPE TYPES
1. REFRACTOR
With a long tube and objective lens up front, the refractor is and"
looks" like a traditional telescope. It generally never needs alignment and
usually has fine resolution. Typical amateur sizes are 2.4", 3" and
4" aperture. Below 2.4" you're better off with binoculars or a
spotting scope. Because refractors usually are designed for f/12 - f/15, they
can get rather large and expensive for the amount of light gathered.
I strongly recommend having one low power eyepiece with the widest apparent
field in a focal length of 20mm or longer to avoid frustration when using
refractors. An equatorial type mount is highly recommended, especially for
3" or larger aperture scopes used for astronomy. New refractor designs from
f/5 to f/8 using 3 or more elements are more portable, have wide fields and are
simple to use.
2. REFLECTORS
Often called" Newtonians" after the inventor, Isaac Newton, these
instruments use a concave mirror at the bottom of the tube to focus the light
cone. A small flat mirror at the top reflects the light to the side where the
image is viewed with the eyepiece. The 200 inch mirror telescope at Mt. Palomar
is a Newtonian reflector.
A 6" Newtonian compares in size and cost to a 3" refractor, while an
8" compares to a 4 inch. You're gaining about four times the light
gathering power but must contend with alignment adjustments and occasional
cleaning of the mirrors in the open tube. f/5 models offer wider fields and are
more compact than f/8 models which usually have slightly better image quality.
2. CATADIOPTRICS
These modern instruments combine lenses and mirrors to make a very versatile,
compact telescope. More expensive than equivalent size reflectors, they are
called "Schmidt-Cassegrains", or" Maksutov" types depending
on the nature of the correcting lens.
They're great for travel, and relatively light weight. Like refractors, their
closed tubes keep optics clean and prevent air currents in the tube, which
sometimes disturb images in reflectors. While most are in the f/10 to f/15
range, photographic versions are produced as fast as f/5.6. When a catadioptric
is made this fast, the secondary mirror must be rather large which results in a
large black spot in the middle of the exit pupil.
This causes some resolution problems at high powers and annoying shadows at very
low powers. So consider these f/5.6 models primarily telephoto lenses, with
moderate effectiveness as a telescope.
"RICH FIELD" Telescopes
Most scopes in the f/4 to f/6 range can be classified as "Rich Field",
which means their power is low enough, field wide enough and exit pupil large
enough to see wide areas of the Milky Way, with literally thousands of stars in
view. Of course, this makes the scope ideal for spotting and photography if 35mm
adapters are available.
The very best " Rich Field Telescopes" ( RFTs) should be capable of
using 2" type eyepieces for the widest field.
RFTs are made as refractors, Schmidt-Newtonians, " Newtonian"
reflectors, and" Dobsonians" (John Dobson, a west coast amateur
pioneered a style of Newtonian on a simple wooden alt. azimuth mount-like a gun
turret). Most RFTs are not quite as good for high power, high resolution planet
viewing as f/8 or longer telescopes.
TELESCOPE
OPTICS SHOWING LIGHT PATHS
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