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Science: Astronomy
Waveguide Telescope Eyepiece   (+1)  [vote for, against]
Guide the light to your height.

The worst part of casual astronomy, besides the bitter cold and vampiric schedule, is all the stooping and craning and bending and squinting, which most often results in shaky, blurry images and a pressing need for a good massage.

To solve this, use fiber optic cabling to guide light from the eyepiece of the telescope to a lightweight handheld eyepiece. This eyepiece could have an adjustable frame which rests against the user's face, resulting in a perfectly-focused image every time they peek, or it could even be worn like a pair of goggles, blocking surrounding light from the wearer's eyes.

I'm not exactly a lens expert, so I can't say exactly what % of light will be lost to this apparatus, but with expensive enough components I'm sure it wouldn't be an issue.
-- Condiment, Jan 10 2008

Whoops http://www.freepate...ne.com/4650279.html
Looks like the idea's been baked even though the product doesn't exist. [Condiment, Jan 10 2008]

Feasible, but I think it would not be ideal. For one thing, having your eye to the eyepiece excludes any peripheral light, making it easier to see faint objects. Also, I suspect you'd lose a lot of light (and, probably, spread it out over a larger area), compounding the problem.

It's probably cheaper and better to have a camera hooked up to a simple display, which is the more usual setup and needn't be costly.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Jan 10 2008


You'd need 1 fiber per pixel, so wit reasonable resolution, the cable would be both expensive and cumbersome. To repeat the resolution of a good camera (8 megapixels) , the cable would be more like a pipe.
-- MisterQED, Jan 10 2008


My grandfather designed optical Instruments for Leitz, and he once envisioned something like that for the gunner in a tank (before, they had their eyes on an eyepiece directly connected to the telescope, which was only possible without risk of injury if the tank stood still) - The design worked in principle, but the cord was about 5cm thick and the users did not like it.
-- loonquawl, Apr 20 2009



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