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Hi everyone, I'm really new to this, so I suspect this is just something I'm doing wrong. I just got my Celestron Firstscope, and I've used it several times to look at the moon. But two nights ago, i used it to try to view Jupiter, since it was so close to the moon. According to the description of the scope, I should be able to view Jupiter, and see Saturn's rings. But even with the strongest lens in the box, Jupiter still appeared to be just a shiny dot. The picture on the back of the box, near the description, has a fairly large image of Jupiter. So am I doing something wrong? Or is the Celestron Firstscope not as good as it claims to be. I would appreciate any help.
Thanks! Æ |
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You will have a hard time seeing the rings of saturn right now. They are pretty close to edge on as seen from earth. I don't know alot about your scope, but I know with mine, on a good night, I can make out the larger cloud bands on jupiter. Is there a possiblity that you are not looking at jupiter?
Try checking out www.heavens-above.com if you haven't yet. |
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Saturn is hidden in the Sun's glare so observation isn't possible. Not to mention its rings are edge on.
The Firstscope should be able to see the cloud bands on Jupiter, however the included accessories may not be sufficient. The eyepieces are very low quality Huygens design and should be replaced with Plossls or Kellners. The high power eyepiece is a 4mm Huygens which I imagine would be painful to observe through. Eye relief decreases with focal length in most eyepiece designs and I'd recommend using barlows to increase magnification instead of shorter focal length eyepieces. There are some extremely affordable eyepieces and barlows at OWL Astronomy, a site I recently discovered. http://www.owlastronomy.com/superplossl.htm Remember that the photos on the box are almost never taken with the same telescope. I hope Celestron has been honest with the packaging and not put Hubble photos, but I don't know. The Firstscope is primarily for wide field, low power observing and won't be the best planetary scope.
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You can't really tell the difference between drunken rambling and sober blogging. |
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You might not have been able to see the moons of jupiter because of this as well:
http://www.space.com/spacewatch/0908...ter-moons.html |
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ok..
1: I wasn't trying to view Saturn. 2: I wasn't looking for Jupiters Moons. 3: I was just trying to view Jupiter through my Telescope, but wasn't able to do it. It was Jupiter that I was looking at. This is exactly what I saw that night. http://www.universetoday.com/2009/09...on-last-night/ Last edited by PetersCreek; 10-September-2009 at 04:45 PM.. Reason: Fixed link |
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Can you describe the dot that you saw? We need a little more info to help you get a better view, or to know whether your expectations were too high due to the picture on the box.
For example: Was it in focus? Was the disk sharp? Could you see at least two cloud belts? How long did you look at it? What was the seeing like that night (were the stars twinkling a lot?)
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"I'm as accurate as any psychic. And I'm a cartoon!" -- Squidward "Arrrgh, the laws of physics be a harsh mistress!" -- Bender |
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Hi,
I'm also completely new to astronomy and recently bought the Celestron firstscope. The picture of jupiter on the box is definetily not something you can see with the firstscope !!!!! It looks like a hubble picture Same is true of the representations shown in a promotional movie for the firstscope.I also had a look at Jupiter and saw a bright disk with four of it's moons in a straight line (two on each side). I was told that with the moon filter which you can buy as accessory you might just be able to see a darker band of clouds on Jupiter. Sorry if you expected a bit too much hubble like abilities. I'm very excited with the (very cheap) scope when I was able to see moons of jupiter. It's well worth the money for an exciting introduction to telescopes. Can't wait to get a view of Saturn, andromeda and the pleiades ! Enjoy the Scope, it's probably not malfunctioning. Jeffrey |
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The review I saw of it recently in one of the astronomy magazines said it uses a spherical mirror so high powers are not possible. A 3" spherical mirror is fine at f/8 but at f/4 it just can't support more than medium power at best. Not enough to see detail on Jupiter. Reviewer (experienced) said he could see two cloud bands. I doubt beginners will however as it takes time to train the eye and brain to see such low contrast detail.
The scope is fine as a low power wide field scope (with a plossl eyepiece) but isn't suited for planetary work. When I see misleading images on the box, I avoid those scopes even if they are a good buy for their designed purpose. Too bad they apparently couldn't be honest with their customers. I don't see how a moon filter (usually just a neutral density filter) will help with the bands, but a light blue filter would enhance the contrast as would a light green one, blue is better in my opinion. Rick Last edited by RickJ; 10-September-2009 at 08:41 PM.. |
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Hello again.
Sorry. I wrote bright disk, but what I see of Jupiter is more accurately described as a bright dot. Still, the moons are easily visible, which for me was fantastic already. But I've never had a look through a "real" telescope and as I live in a very brightly lit Dutch city, and peered just past a street lantern three meters away from my window I had expected not much. The filter I have is described as "moon filter" but it looks greenish.........? A new hobby just might have begun for me......... |
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If Jupiter was a dot, then you were most likely looking at a star and not at Jupiter. Jupiter will show a disk even at low powers. Stars will always be points of light, when the telescope is focused.
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"I'm as accurate as any psychic. And I'm a cartoon!" -- Squidward "Arrrgh, the laws of physics be a harsh mistress!" -- Bender |
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Well, it's not a point but a rather big dot. And I do see the moons the way I'm supposed to see them at the particular time and date. Maybe I make wrong usage of the word "dot".
Tried to find Andromeda yesterday using Cassiopeia as aguide, but couldn't find it or did not recognize it.... Will try another night..... |
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Quote:
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"I'm as accurate as any psychic. And I'm a cartoon!" -- Squidward "Arrrgh, the laws of physics be a harsh mistress!" -- Bender |
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Is this what y'all are talking about?
http://www.universetoday.com/2009/04...-of-astronomy/ ? I came across this, earlier this afternoon and thought to get it for my baby! Is it a wise choice / move?
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clear skies If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. CARL SAGAN Mak: Pass the pepperoni please. Fazor: "Hail, Bautainia! We pledge our hearts to thee! Science and woo, some babbling too, and astron-oh-meee!" slang: And it made ash out of yew and tree. |
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Oh I just read your comments MrJ / Siguy ...I see what you mean.
But from the dealer's notes here...it says... Quote:
Are the modified eye-pieces different from what you point out, Siguy?
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clear skies If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. CARL SAGAN Mak: Pass the pepperoni please. Fazor: "Hail, Bautainia! We pledge our hearts to thee! Science and woo, some babbling too, and astron-oh-meee!" slang: And it made ash out of yew and tree. |
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In my experience (which I'll admit was limited) MAs are decent eyepieces, but they're only sharp at the center of the field. At the edge of the field stars are out of focus compared to the center. They're definitely better than the other Huygens eyepieces I was talking about.
I'm assuming you were looking at the Skywatcher version (Skywatcher "Heritage" 76), since you live in the UK?
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You can't really tell the difference between drunken rambling and sober blogging. |
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Yes Sir, I am.
I see Nancy, mentions about the finderscope etc., being in a separate kit piece. But this one includes it all. And shipping too, in the price. A very reasonable £50. I would reckon, as a first astronomical 'scope, for a child/budding astronomer...it would be a pretty exciting tool to use.
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clear skies If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. CARL SAGAN Mak: Pass the pepperoni please. Fazor: "Hail, Bautainia! We pledge our hearts to thee! Science and woo, some babbling too, and astron-oh-meee!" slang: And it made ash out of yew and tree. |
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The telescope looks so beautiful.
I partly quote the blurb, on site... ...The beautiful, luxurious tube graphics depict a richly historical theme celebrating the history of the telescope. The images have been specially designed to symbolise Galileo and his conflict with the Catholic church. Galileo Galilei's public championing of Copernicus' theory of heliocentrism, which was contrary to the geocentric beliefs at the time, eventually led to him being denounced to the Roman Inquisition. He was subsequently tried, suspected of heresy, forced to recant, and spent the rest of his life under house arrest. Of course Galileo, "The father of modern science" and "The father of modern observational astronomy" was proved right in the end. The telescope tube is also adorned with the words "Galileo 400" and "International Year of Astronomy" as well as key dates in the lifetime of Galileo... I think I can attach a picture... and it only weighs about 1.75 kgs. Manageable weight, for a child of his age. Flynn could share with his friends too, as one does.
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clear skies If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. CARL SAGAN Mak: Pass the pepperoni please. Fazor: "Hail, Bautainia! We pledge our hearts to thee! Science and woo, some babbling too, and astron-oh-meee!" slang: And it made ash out of yew and tree. |
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I can remember getting a little reflector like that when I was a child. I knew NOTHING about collimation, etc. but went out and actually saw the RINGS around Saturn! I was THRILLED !
I also saw the disk of Jupiter, and the four moons as little dots on each side of the planet. I am sure I did not notice any cloud bands, and it wasn't til probably many years later that I had a scope powerful enough to show any definition such as that. It is a shame that so many telescopes are sold with pictures of HUGE planets, FULL of detail on the box! It really makes you believe that you are going to see something like that through your new possession ! I heartily agree about Plossl eyepieces. Don't get anything too powerful, because you will only see a bigger, fuzzier circle, instead of a fairly viewable large dot. A proper eyepiece will probably show you a circle about an eighth of an inch in apparent diameter, and the full circle of the Moon should just about fit in the apparent field of view ! Clear skies to you ! Jim |
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I would say that a lot of beginners' scopes have the resolution to see cloud bands on Jupiter. The Firstscope/Heritage is a very fast small reflector that isn't intended for any kind of high magnification observing. But I'd think most Synta 70mm f10 refractors could reasonably do 50x/inch observing, and will show respectable planetary detail.
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You can't really tell the difference between drunken rambling and sober blogging. |
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One thing many(most) beginners do not realise is that you have to learn to see. An experienced observer can see much more detail than somebody who is just starting out.
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Any day you wake up on "the right side of the dirt" is a good day. T. Anderson |
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Quote:
Of course, most of these telescopes also come with very poor eyepieces, and often claim horribly exaggerated claims of "300 power" or more ! They may actually be 300X magnification, but the images are so dim, shaky, and fuzzy, as to be worthless! Oh, yes, the tripod is usually very flimsy and shaky, as well! Our club has highly recommended that one new to the hobby invest his/her money in a good set of 7X50 binoculars and a good star chart book ( Tirion's for example ) so the novice can find his way around the sky, before getting so discouraged with the "dime store telescope" as to never wish to look at the sky again! JMHO along with the local club ! Jim |
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Kyle, I wouldn't expect any more than that from any 70mm telescope! Even a 4-5 inch reflector is pretty dim for visual astronomy on deep sky objects, unless it is a pretty "fast" scope, like a "short-tube 80".
At least, this reviewer seemed to be rather impressed with one: http://www.cloudynights.com/item.php?item_id=491 Remember, that is 80mm and F5. Quite a difference from 70mm ( maybe ? ) F11 ! Clear skies. Jim |
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Quote:
The Synta I was referring to was just any 70mm made by Synta Optical Ltd of Suzhou, the manufacturer that owns Celestron and Skywatcher and produces telescopes for various other companies, including Orion. Models include the Orion Observer 70, Skywatcher Greatstart 70EQ/AZ, and Celestron Astromaster 70EQ/AZ. They all seem well equipped enough; the Skywatcher, for example, comes with two actual Super Plossl eyepieces, something I have yet to see in a scope that cheap. The mounts are stable enough as well, if you tweak them a bit. In my experience Synta products seem to be reasonably well built and optically good. According to some, they've improved since they acquired Celestron. Of course, a 70mm isn't really much telescope at all, and I was really just comparing these with a 76mm f4 reflector for planetary observing. Still, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend one to someone on a very tight budget. Unfortunately, they don't seem regularly available in dime stores.
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You can't really tell the difference between drunken rambling and sober blogging. |
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I agree. The Orion/Celestron short tube 80 (also made by Synta I believe) is great for wide field deep sky observing. I have even seen them used as finderscopes for much larger telescopes.
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Our club puts on regular "Telescope Workshops" at our local hands-on interactive science museum, "Discovery Station". Unfortunately, a good amount of the telescopes that come through the door are of the 70mm F10 variety. Plastic objectives or not, they are almost to the unit, miserable scopes. I must confess that even the "Discovery Station" was selling a cheap piece of junk before we showed them all that was wrong with the poor thing!
I stand by my position that unless a person is very careful in what they purchase, they are apt to get a rather poor scope for their initial investment, and really should put the money into a fair pair of binoculars before getting a better quality scope. I will admit that I am not familiar with the Synta line, or with their purchase of Celestron. I do own an older Celestron scope myself, and am constantly told at star parties that it is one of the best 8 inch scopes that others have ever seen! I hope that Synta doesn't compromise the Celestron line just to be able to turn a better profit! |
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