Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Build your EYEPIECE COLLECTION
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
|December 2023
Great eyepieces are crucial to any astronomical setup. Here Tim Jardine arms you with the info you need to choose the best ones to invest in

Many new telescope packages come with a basic eyepiece or two, good enough to help you get started with the hobby and familiarise yourself with your equipment. Plenty of experienced astronomers will hold fond memories of their first view of Jupiter or Saturn through these starter eyepieces. But it doesn't take long until you start wondering... how much better would the view be through a different lens?
It's fair to say, though, that the choices on offer can be bewildering. Especially given the nomenclature: you might hear of Plössls, orthoscopics, radians and Naglers, or even Kellners and Erfles, and find each costing anywhere between £25 to an eye-watering £1,000 plus - which is perhaps more than the telescope itself!
However, if you can decipher all these terms, you should be able to build a well-chosen selection of four or five eyepieces that will provide high-quality views of everything the night sky has to offer for many years to come.
Types of eyepiece
Wide fields of view offer an immersive, but expensive, option
There are a great many types of eyepiece on offer, but essentially, the difference between them is the apparent field of view. This is measured in degrees as seen by the observer. The human eye can see around 180° in the horizontal plane, and so the closer to this an eyepiece gets, the more immersive your viewing experience will be. Generally, the wider the view on offer, the more complicated the eyepiece's design and the higher the price.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2023-Ausgabe von BBC Sky at Night Magazine.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
How to find a speck in space
New Horizons proves stellar parallax can locate a probe in the vastness, using the light of just two stars
4 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
FIRST CONTACT
Seven missions that gave us our first real look at alien worlds
6 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Possible planet found at Alpha Centauri A
If true, it would be the closest exoplanet ever found in a habitable zone
2 mins
October 2025
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Get to know lunar rays
A full Moon might bleach the sky and thwart your stargazing, but it's the best time to catch the magnificent lunar rays
3 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
JWST decodes the chaos behind paint-splash nebula
A companion star may be sculpting tangled NGC 6072, a rare multipolar planetary nebula
1 min
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
INSIDE THE SKY AT NIGHT
September's Sky at Night episode tackled the Hubble constant. George Dransfield considers how some of the cornerstones of science aren't as rock-solid as we thought
3 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Bridge of stray stars revealed
Dark Energy Camera image of galaxy cluster Abell 3667 brings cosmic history into focus
1 min
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Stargazing in the Atacama Desert
Becca Marsh tours Chile's high Atacama Desert - home to some of the darkest skies and most advanced astronomical observatories on the planet - and discovers a stargazing destination like no other
7 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Titan's lakes could form protocells
Study shows conditions are right to create vesicles, key structures in the origin of life
1 min
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Earliest black hole discovered
The supermassive black hole dates from just 500 million years after the Big Bang
2 mins
October 2025
Translate
Change font size