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  #1  
Old 16-06-2011, 12:49 AM
luigi
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Help me estimate FOV of a scope

Hi All,

I'd like to know the Field of View of a very old telescope, a 9.6 inches (24.4 cm) Aprochromatic Refractor with a 4 meters tube.

It's for a silly project I have emulating how the sky would look from such a scope.

Thanks for your help!!!
Luis
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  #2  
Old 16-06-2011, 07:39 AM
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mithrandir (Andrew)
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Originally Posted by luigi View Post
Hi All,

I'd like to know the Field of View of a very old telescope, a 9.6 inches (24.4 cm) Aprochromatic Refractor with a 4 meters tube.

It's for a silly project I have emulating how the sky would look from such a scope.

Thanks for your help!!!
Luis, you need the focal length of the scope and the camera image size (35mm, APS-C, etc) or the eyepiece focal length to work out the FOV.
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  #3  
Old 16-06-2011, 08:20 AM
luigi
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Ty Andrew,
Ok this is going to be hard.
It's the telescope that was used at the Berlin Observatory to find Neptune. I couldn't find that information and I got no answer from the museum.
Maybe someone knows the answer...
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Old 16-06-2011, 08:53 AM
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multiweb (Marc)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by luigi View Post
Hi All,

I'd like to know the Field of View of a very old telescope, a 9.6 inches (24.4 cm) Aprochromatic Refractor with a 4 meters tube.

It's for a silly project I have emulating how the sky would look from such a scope.

Thanks for your help!!!
Luis
Have you tried CCD Calc?
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  #5  
Old 18-06-2011, 11:31 AM
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torana68 (Roger)
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Ty Andrew,
Ok this is going to be hard.
Maybe someone knows the answer...
not hard if you can do basic math, try this
http://astro.unl.edu/classaction/ani...lescope10.html

this will give you an idea, if you want exact do the maths, estimate the eyepiece sizes to get an overall feeling. OR do some research on eyepieces available at the time to narrow it down, Id assume it was a fairly big eyepiece 20mm or more?
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Old 18-06-2011, 11:36 AM
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DavidU (Dave)
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That's a fairly tidy telescope there Luigi.
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  #7  
Old 24-06-2011, 06:41 PM
Wavytone
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Old refractors of that size were typically f/15 - f/18.
That means a focal length around 3.5-4 metres.

At 3.5 metres, 1 degree = 61 mm across the focal plane. At 4 metres, 70mm.

You might just fit the moon in the field of some of the really big 2" eyepieces, like my LV50 mm.
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  #8  
Old 24-06-2011, 10:12 PM
luigi
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Ty Wavytone, any guesstimate is good!
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