davidschmid10
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How big would an object have to be in order to be seen from Earth with the naked eye? How about with an average home user's telescope?
David
David
I guess I don't have any scientific reason to believe stacking can do better than the theoretical max, but some of the results look pretty amazing. Here's the best Mars image I've seen so far this season. The image's resolution is .07 arcsec/pixel. The theoretical max is .3 arcsec.mgb_phys said:Don't know what the difference between resolving power and resolution is except maybe one is the theoretical diffraction limit ( 1.22 lambda/d) and the other is taking into account the optical quality and effect of the secondary.
Either way you are likely to do worse than 0.5" in the visible unless you are on a REALLY good site.
I have seen artifacts left on the moon - haven't you?ocpaul20 said:It would be nice if we saw some artifacts left on the moon rather than just a few places where the ground has been scorched from the rockets on takeoff & landing.
Feelings aren't reality.I feel that a moon buggy really should be large enough to show up on some satellite photos somewhere - and in extremely good detail.
Satellites orbit at about 150 miles. The moon is 476,000 miles away. You tell me what the resolution should be...Satellite imaging has got to the stage now where they can resolve down to the size of a baseball, so why are the pictures of the moon and Mars so terrible and low-res? Maybe we are not supposed to know that imaging technology has advanced this far. Anyway...
Satellites orbit at about 150 miles. The moon is 476,000 miles away. You tell me what the resolution should be...