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Magnification is defined as $f_{objectiv}/f_{ocular}$. If I had the first telescope with the focal length of 500 mm, ocular 10 mm and second telescope with the focal length of 1000 mm, ocular 20 mm, is there a difference between them? Both of them has 50x magnification.

I want to know if there is any difference in the quality of image, etc.

Thank you for all!

User123
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  • Can you add each telescope's objective diameter (aperture) to the question? – Mike G Aug 01 '19 at 14:21
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    All else being equal (same aperture, same quality of optics) there won't be a difference between them. But long f/ratio (longer focal length with same aperture) does make it easier to fabricate a quality lens/mirror. – antlersoft Aug 01 '19 at 15:01
  • @MikeG I am centered only to magnification. – User123 Aug 01 '19 at 17:22

1 Answers1

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The larger the entrance aperture, the greater the light-collecting capability. Now, you didn't specify that, but that does matter in your final choice.

Next, as the comments suggest, the choice of optics depends on the cost vs. quality trades. You want not only a given magnification but also as little coma, distortion, spherical aberration, and so on. At a very simple (and probably unrealistic) level, the longer lens pair (1000,20) might be easier to fabricate with low aberrations. In real life, we quickly descend into multi-element systems, or cemented doublet designs, and so on.

I'm guessing you are talking about a Keplerian design (two positive lenses), in which case consider how much longer the physical telescope is in the 1000-20 case.

Carl Witthoft
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  • This is a subtle point but I think that this light collection capability only matters for unresolved objects like stars, moons (other than our own) asteroids and unresolved planets. I don't think (but am not sure that) the double-everything system will make an extended object like Jupiter or the Moon any brighter at the same magnification. Instead, the diameter of the light at the eyepiece's exit pupil (where we place our own eye's entrance pupil) will be twice as wide, and may simply be wider than our 6mm max pupil. It might matter for eyepiece projection or astrophotography but not viewing – uhoh Oct 29 '20 at 02:15
  • @uhoh I believe the exit pupil would be the same in either case. – Mike G Oct 29 '20 at 10:20
  • @MikeG my comment carefully specifies a "double-everything system" and so is self-contained and I think correct as written. I see that you asked about the aperture in your comment and received only an unhelpful response so far. – uhoh Oct 29 '20 at 11:11
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    @uhoh I had confused this Q with the new one flagged as a dup. – Mike G Oct 29 '20 at 15:09
  • @MikeG I had been reminded how the diameter of the exit pupil scales directly with entrance pupil diameter (telescope aperture) after having to delete my first answer here because it overfilled the eye's entrance pupil, and then posted a new answer, so because that was fresh in my mind I used the "double-everything system". I think these are all great questions but yes there seems to be some duplication. – uhoh Oct 29 '20 at 23:12