MAGNIFICATION Eyepieces determine your telescope's magnification. To calculate the
magnification of an eyepiece in your telescope, divide the focal length of the
telescope by the focal length of the eyepiece:
TRUE FIELD OF VIEW Eyepieces also determine the true field you see in the
sky. To calculate the true field of view that you will see (in degrees), divide
the eyepiece field stop diameter by the telescope's focal length and multiply
the result by 57.3:
True field of view = eyepiece field stop diameter ÷
telescope focal length x 57.3
THE FIELD STOP AND APPARENT FIELD OF VIEW The field stop is the metal ring
inside the eyepiece barrel that limits the field size. It's projected by the
eyepiece so that it appears as a circle out in space when you look through the
eyepiece. The angular diameter of this circle is called the apparent field of
view (AFOV) and is a fixed property for each eyepiece design. For example,
Plössl eyepieces have an AFOV of 50º, Radians have 60º, Panoptics have 68º,
Naglers have 82° and Ethos eyepieces have 100°.
LOW-TO-MEDIUM POWER VIEWING For low-power viewing of large objects, or to use
your telescope as a low-power finder, you will want an eyepiece that delivers
close to the maximum possible true field of view (note that for 1.25"
eyepieces, the maximum field stop diameter is 27mm; for 2" eyepieces, it's
46mm). Then add eyepieces covering uniform increments in smaller field stops.
For example, if your widest field eyepiece has a 40mm diameter field stop and
you choose a decreasing increment diameter factor of 2 (which results in a 4x
decrease in area size), you'll end up with eyepieces having field stop diameters
of approximately 40mm, 20mm and 10mm. To further fill in with incremental steps,
add eyepieces with approximate field stop diameters of 28mm and 14mm. Of course,
avoid duplicating focal lengths. For example, if you use a 31mm Nagler (with a
42mm field stop diameter), you would not need a 32mm Plossl (with a 27mm field
stop diameter).
In general, for each field stop size, choosing eyepieces with shorter focal
lengths and larger apparent fields of view will allow you to see more detail and
fainter stars. In addition, you'll have a smaller exit pupil to better match
your eyesight.
EYEGLASSES AND EYE RELIEF If you do not need eyeglasses to correct
astigmatism, don't use them when observing. If you wear glasses to correct
astigmatism, make sure they're multi-coated, and try to choose eyepieces that
have at least 15mm to 20mm of eye relief, to minimize any field reduction
(vignetting).* You may find that with small exit pupils such as 1mm or
less, you probably will not need eyeglasses, and can therefore use eyepieces
with less eye relief.
*Many Tele Vue eyepieces accept DIOPTRX, the unique addition that replaces prescription eyeglasses that correct eyesight astigmatism.
EXIT PUPIL The exit pupil is the image of the objective that is formed by the
eyepiece. It's where you place your eye to see the full field of view. You can
calculate the diameter of the exit pupil by dividing the focal length of the
eyepiece by your scope's focal ratio:
For reflector telescopes, it's best to avoid exit pupils larger than 7mm or
smaller than 0.5mm. Refracting telescopes have no upper limits on exit pupil
sizes.
IMAGE AMPLIFIERS (BARLOWS AND POWERMATES) You can also choose a long focal
length eyepiece with comfortable eye relief and use image amplifiers to increase
power. Tele Vue makes Barlows and Powermates (an improvement to the Barlow-type
design) in magnifications factors of 2x, 2.5x, 3x, 4x and 5x.
Paracorr (Parabola Corrector)
If you have a Newtonian or Dobsonian reflector that's f/5 or faster, you should
seriously consider using the Paracorr to eliminate coma, so your full field
eyepiece sharpness is not compromised. Paracorr also acts like a 1.15x Barlow,
so for example, a 1000mm f/4.5 scope becomes 1150mm f/5.2.
HIGH-POWER VIEWING Once you’ve selected an eyepiece set based on field stop sizes, calculate
the magnifications produced with your scope. For planetary or double star
observing, you’ll want an eyepiece in at least the 150x range. For determining
maximum power, a good rule of thumb is to use no more than 60x per inch of
aperture for scopes with apertures up to 6". Higher magnifications may still be
pleasing but will not likely reveal any additional detail. Realistically, the
atmosphere will usually limit your planetary observing to a maximum
magnification of about 300x, no matter how large your telescope aperture.
Basically, you’ll be choosing low and medium power eyepieces by field stop
increments to "frame" the subject, and high power eyepieces by magnification
increments (based on your scope’s aperture), to reach the optimum contrast and
resolution for viewing planets and double stars.
Thank you for considering Tele Vue eyepieces. Every Tele Vue eyepiece is Q.C.
tested at f/4.0, and can be serviced or repaired by Tele Vue. For more
individual advice on specific applications, you can always call Tele Vue during
east coast business hours.