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WHAT IS COMA?
It’s not some sort of astronomical state of unconsciousness. It’s an
optical aberration. Precisely defined, coma is a distortion in which
the image of a star cannot be focused to a point, but takes on the
shape of a comet. Worst yet, the majority of telescope optical systems,
including the popular Schmidt-Cassegrain, have it to one degree or
another.
THIS SIDE-BY-SIDE COMPARISON TELLS THE TALE.
Two images, one camera, one night, and no image processing*. Two very
different results. Just look at the magnified view from the
Schmidt-Cassegrain on the left. Notice the crescent-shaped distortion
of the star images caused by coma. Now look at the magnified image of
the same stars from the LX200-ACF Advanced Coma-Free** system and
you will immediately see advantages of the ACF optical system. Sharp,
round stars without coma. Sharp from the center all the way to the edge
of this wide field.
Once, you would have had
to spend tens of thousands of dollars for an aplanatic optical system
(a fancy term for coma-free). Now that Meade has made this
Advanced Coma-Free optical system, this level of performance is
affordable to the amateur.
*The
camera was a Canon 5D Digital SLR with a full 35 mm sensor. All of the
above comparisons were taken using the original full frame images
without any processing. The above images of M44 were taken by Jack
Newton. See for yourself by downloading the two images and viewing them
at 100% screen resolution from Meade.com.
**The Advanced Coma-Free design is an aplanatic optical system
that uses a hyperbolic secondary mirror with a
corrector-lens-and-spherical-primary-combination that performs as one
hyperbolic element.
Return to LX200-ACF
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