[QUOTE]
Originally posted by slice of heaven
Hi John,
That post(above Truff's) really cleared the fog.
One Question though; how does the f/ratio change with the barlow?
Hi Geoff,
Thats in fact how a barlow works, a barlow is a telenegative lens that increases the effective focal length of the light cone of the original telescope, thereby increasing the magnification of any given eyepiece by the amplification factor of the barlow. The magnification of a given eyepiece in a given telescope is calculated by dividing the focal length of the telescope by the focal length of the eyepiece. The 2X barlow achieves the effective increase in focal length of the light cone by halving its angle of incidence.
Here is a good article explaining how a barlow works by Stephen Tonkin. There is also a good diagram showing the path of the original light cone and what happens after it goes through the barlow.
http://www.astunit.com/tutorials/barlow.htm
Here are a couple of other websites you could look at:
http://astro.isi.edu/notes/barlow.html
http://www.atmsite.org/contrib/Carlin/barlow/
http://www.astrosurf.com/legault/focal.html
Its also worth being aware that the amplification factor (magnification) of a barlow thats quoted (printed on its side) only holds when the barlow is used at a fixed position in the light path. For example a 2X barlow when used in conjunction with a diagonal and a refractor or SCT or MCT will give approximately 2X when used after the diagonal and approximately 3X when used before the diagonal. You can also increase the magnification of a barlow by using an extension tube which moves it further out in the light path. Something else to note is that the stated magnification of the barlow (eg 2X) is only an approximation and the 1 barlow could provide a range of magnifications between about 1.7 and 2.3 depending on the combination of telescope and eyepieces used with it.
There is a way to measure the exact magnification factor that an eyepiece and barlow is giving, I won't bore you with the details but if anyone wants to know out of curiosity to test their barlow let me know and I will tell you how to do it.
Well you wanted to know the time and I just told you how to build a clock, but I guess thats me
Clear Skies
John Bambury