by apodman » Sat Dec 06, 2008 5:02 pm
The image you see through a telescope depends on the type of telescope (reflecting - Newtonian vs. Cassegrainian; refracting - Galilean vs. modern; catadoptric; etc.), and its lens, mirror, or prism arrangement. The resulting image may be upright, inverted (mirrored), or rotated without inversion. If your telescope is one kind and your finder scope is another, you know the extra twist your brain has to do to come out straight. (You already do one twist from scope to sky, so why not another?)
The image you see through a telescope depends on the type of telescope (reflecting - Newtonian vs. Cassegrainian; refracting - Galilean vs. modern; catadoptric; etc.), and its lens, mirror, or prism arrangement. The resulting image may be [b]upright[/b], [b]inverted[/b] (mirrored), or [b]rotated[/b] without inversion. If your telescope is one kind and your finder scope is another, you know the extra twist your brain has to do to come out straight. (You already do one twist from scope to sky, so why not another?)