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- | {{ : | + | ====== Telescope System ====== |
- | (Images needed) (hyperlinks needed) | ||
- | Your Seestar is a unique instrument. **On the outside, only the outermost lens, an on/off button, four battery-level lights, and a USB-C port are visible. And that’s all you really need to know about the hardware**, so you can skip the rest. But if you’re interested in the details keep reading. | + | {{ : |
Inside there’s a 50mm aperture, 250-mm focal length, ƒ/5 triplet apochromatic | Inside there’s a 50mm aperture, 250-mm focal length, ƒ/5 triplet apochromatic | ||
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There’s also a motor that will automatically focus the scope for you, although you can do that manually if you prefer. And there’s even a little heater you can turn on to keep dew from fogging up the lens. | There’s also a motor that will automatically focus the scope for you, although you can do that manually if you prefer. And there’s even a little heater you can turn on to keep dew from fogging up the lens. | ||
- | If all that isn’t enough, there are three filters inside: an opaque one for calibration, a UV / IR Cut filter for the Moon, galaxies and stars, and a dual-band | + | If all that isn’t enough, there are three filters inside: an opaque one for calibration; a UV / IR Cut filter for the Moon, galaxies, reflection nebulae, |
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