Oxygen III Filter 2"
Orion
Oxygen III Filter
2"
Bought new from Bintel in 2009 for $249
For Sale $115 ono
Posted within Australia
Technical Stuff:
Oxygen III line filters have a narrow passband centered on the 4959Ĺ and 5007Ĺ emission lines of doubly ionized oxygen where emission nebulas radiate strongly. The filters pass 85-95% of the light of these emission lines. At the same time, they reject almost all of the light from all other sources – city street lights, natural airglow, broadband starlight, etc. This increases the contrast of emission nebulas by making them stand out against a considerable dimmed sky background. They will dim much of the reflected starlight of a reflection nebula, however, and nebulas with a strong reflection component will often look better in a filter with a wider pass band.
Oxygen III filters generally have better than twice the contrast of a narrowband filter (four times the contrast or more compared with a broadband filter). They are good for observing very faint planetary and gaseous nebulas (such as M76 and Barnard’s Loop in Orion) that are normally invisible without a filter, even from relatively dark sky sites. They also give excellent results on brighter nebulas like M17 and M27 from light-polluted suburban locations. They are often your only hope for seeing faint nebulas from heavily light-polluted locations.
Oxygen III filters work best with medium to large aperture telescopes (6” to 8” and larger). They are for visual use only and cannot be used for photography.
Last edited by Allan_L; 22-02-2012 at 03:18 PM.
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