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Old 04-06-2021, 09:38 AM
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gregbradley
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mura_gadi View Post
Hello,

The total brightness of an object is determined from aperture only, and the f ration only affecting the magnification when used with eyepieces/lenses.

So, with a given eyepiece used the shorter F ratio will magnify higher and cause the object to be bigger but dimmer. (Same light spread out over a larger area). If you could set the 130 to have the same magnification at f7 and f6.5 you should see no difference in brightness.



Steve
Yes the camera reference applies because the aperture does vary when you open up the aperture of a camera lens.

But practically speaking with regards to telescopes with a fixed aperture, if you add a reducer you will reduce exposure times and get a wider view. Hence the popularity of 8-12 inch scope with fast F ratio like F4 or less.
More of the light from the scene is allowed onto the sensor and when you have a long focal length its the same as cropping the field of view.

So the extra light is coming from the wider field of view.

The faster the F ratio the more difficult it is to have the image aberration free and the more sensitive to collimation etc.

Greg.
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