An important optional feature to optimize the performance of your Meade telescope.
Image brightness in a telescope is crucially dependent on the reflectivity of the telescope's mirrors and on the transmission of its lenses. Neither of these processes, mirror-reflectivity or lens-transmission, is, however, perfect; light loss occurs in each instance where light is reflected or transmitted. Uncoated glass, for example, reflects about 4% of the light impacting it; in the case of an uncoated lens 4% of the light is lost at entrance to and at exit from the lens, for a total light loss of about 8%.
Early reflecting telescopes of the 1700's and 1800's suffered greatly from mirrors of poor reflectivity — reflection losses of 50% or more were not uncommon. Later, silvered mirrors improved reflectivity, but at high cost and with poor durability. Modern optical coatings have succeeded in reducing mirror-reflection and lens-transmission losses to acceptable levels at reasonable cost.
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Meade Standard Coatings: The optical surfaces of all Meade telescopes include high-grade optical coatings fully consistent in quality with the precision of the optical surfaces themselves. These standard-equipment coatings include mirror surfaces of highly purified aluminum, vacuum-deposited at high temperature and overcoated with silicon monoxide (SiO), and correcting lenses coated on both sides for high light transmission with magnesium fluoride (MgF2). Meade standard mirror and lens coatings equal or exceed the reflectivity and transmission, respectively, of virtually any optical coatings currently offered in the commercial telescope industry.
The Meade UHTC Group: Technologies recently developed at the Meade Irvine coatings facility, however, including installation of some of the largest and most advanced vacuum coating instrumentation currently available, have permitted the vacuum-deposition of a series of exotic optical coatings precisely tuned to optimize the visual, photographic, and CCD imaging performance of Meade telescopes. These specialized, and extremely advantageous, coatings are offered here as the Meade Ultra-High Transmission Coatings (UHTC) group, a coatings group available optionally on many Meade telescope models.
In Meade catadioptric, or mirror-lens, telescopes (including the ETX-90AT, ETX-105AT, and ETX-125AT; LX10, LX90, and LX200GPS Schmidt-Cassegrains; and LXD55-Series Schmidt-Newtonians) before incoming light is brought to a focus, it passes through, or is
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reflected by, four optical surfaces: the front surface of the correcting lens, the rear surface of the correcting lens, the primary mirror, and the secondary mirror. Each of these four surfaces results in some loss of light, with the level of loss being dependent on the chemistry of each surface's optical coatings and on the wavelength of light. (Standard aluminum mirror coatings, for example, typically have their highest reflectivity in the yellow region of the visual spectrum, at a wavelength of about 580nm.)
Mirror Coatings: Meade ETX,
Schmidt-Cassegrain, and Schmidt-Newtonian
telescopes equipped with the Ultra-High
Transmission Coatings group include
primary and secondary mirrors coated
with aluminum enhanced with a complex
stack of multi-layer coatings of titanium
dioxide (TiO2)
and silicon dioxide (SiO2).
The thickness of each coating layer
is precisely controlled to within
1% of optimal thickness. The result
is a dramatic increase in mirror reflectivity
across the entire visible spectrum.
Correcting Lens Coatings: Meade telescopes ordered with the UHTC group include, in addition, an exotic and tightly-controlled series of coatings on both sides of the correcting lens or correcting plate, coatings which include multiple layers of aluminum oxide (Al2O3), titanium dioxide (TiO2), and
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magnesium fluoride (MgF2). Per-surface light transmission of the correcting lens is thereby increased at the yellow wavelength of 580nm., for example, to 99.8%, versus a per-surface transmission of 98.7% for the standard coating.
The importance of the UHTC group becomes apparent when comparing total telescope light transmission, or throughput, caused by the multiplier, or compounding, effect of the four optical surfaces. With each optical surface contributing significantly to telescope light throughput, the effect of all four surfaces
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combined is indeed dramatic,
as demonstrated by the graphs on the
facing page, as well as by the table
of the brightest nebular emission
lines. At the H-a wavelength of 656nm.,
total transmission increases from
76.7% to 88.5%, an increase of 15.4%;
at the helium wavelengths of 588nm.
and 469nm. — strong emission
lines in hot planetary nebulae —
total telescope transmission increases
by 13.8% and 16.8%, respectively;
at the |
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two nitrogen II lines
of 655nm. and 658nm. and at the sulfur
II line of 673nm., transmission is increased
by 16%. Averaged over the entire
visible spectrum (450nm. to 700nm.),
total light transmission to the telescope
focus increases by about 15%.
Observing with the UHTC: Meade ETX, Schmidt-Cassegrain, and Schmidt-Newtonian telescopes equipped with the UHTC present dramatically brighter images on the full range of celestial objects — from emission and planetary nebulae such as M8, M20, and M57 to star clusters and galaxies such as M3, M13, and M101. Observations of the Moon and planets, since they are observed in reflected (white) sunlight, benefit in image brightness from the full spectrum of increased transmission.
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Emission Line |
Wavelength (nm.) |
Transmission: Standard Coating (%) |
Transmission: UHTC Group (%) |
Increase* |
Hydrogen-alpha (Ha) |
656 |
76.7 |
88.46 |
15.33% |
Hydrogen-beta (Hb) |
486 |
76.8 |
89.22 |
16.17% |
Oxygen III |
496 |
77.6 |
89.78 |
15.7% |
Oxygen III |
501 |
77.9 |
88.98 |
15.51% |
Helium II |
469 |
75 |
87.63 |
16.84% |
Helium I |
588 |
79.2 |
90.1 |
13.76% |
Nitrogen II |
655 |
76.7 |
88.5 |
15.38% |
Nitrogen II |
658 |
76.6 |
88.39 |
15.39% |
Sulfur II |
673 |
75.7 |
87.79 |
15.97% |
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* The % increase is obtained by dividing the UHTC-transmission (column 4) by the standard coatings transmission (column 3).
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The overall effect
of the UHTC is, as it relates to image
brightness, to increase the telescope's
effective aperture. Image brightness
of the Meade 10" LX200GPS is, for
example, effectively increased by about
0.75 inch of aperture.
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