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Are longer telescopes better?

Are longer telescopes better?

“The bigger a telescope is, the more light it can catch and the better the sharpness of the image becomes.” Larger telescopes enable astronomers to observe fainter objects. Larger telescopes also enable astronomers to observe and analyze planets around distant stars – and maybe find another Earth out there.

What are the advantages of bigger telescopes?

Larger telescopes gather more light. For professional astronomers, more light being gathered means that suitable image exposures of various objectives can be created more quickly. Being able to get images more quickly means that it can be tasked to more projects in a given period of time.

What size of the telescope is best to use?

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As a rule of thumb, your telescope should have at least 2.8 inches (70 mm) aperture — and preferably more. Dobsonian telescopes, which are reflectors with a simple mount, provide lots of aperture at relatively low cost. A larger aperture lets you see fainter objects and finer detail than a smaller one can.

Do bigger telescopes collect more light?

Larger telescopes collect more light and allow you to see greater detail. Telescopes make objects appear larger. Larger telescopes allow astronomers to see farther into space.

How powerful is a 130mm telescope?

130mm (5in) to 200mm (8in) or equivalent b) Stars: double stars separated by about 1 arc second in good seeing, and some faint stars down to magnitude 13 or better.

Are some telescopes worse than having no scope at all?

And every year we face the same problem: how to gently tell some of them that what they’ve got is better suited for a boat anchor than for astronomy. It may be hard to believe, but some telescopes are worse than having no scope at all.

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Why is tracking with a small telescope so difficult?

The smallest errors in polar alignment, defects in mount mechanics, and other variables make accurate tracking with a large scope far more challenging. A modest, budget-minded mount can still perform quite well with a small telescope that has an equally modest focal length.

How big of a telescope do I need to see Saturn?

Saturn will look dim and blurry at 400x in a 70-mm refractor seen at the top of this composite. A more modest 200x in a better telescope will produce a much more pleasing image. You’ll want more than one eyepiece, because eyepieces are how you control the magnification of your telescope.

What do we see when we look into a telescope?

That light is what we see when we look into a telescope. A telescope is a tool that astronomers use to see faraway objects. Most telescopes, and all large telescopes, work by using curved mirrors to gather and focus light from the night sky.