The Moon Through 10 Telescopes!
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 ก.ย. 2024
- Telescopes in this video:
Celestron Travel Scope 60
Zhummel Z100
Astromaster 70AZ LT
Celestron Inspire 100AZ
Explore Firstlight Newtonian 114mm
Explore Scientific ED102 Carbon Fiber
Explore Firstlight Refractor 102mm (1000mm FL)
Explore Scientific Newtonian 8inch Carbon Fiber
Celestron C8
Zhumell 12 inch dobsonian
Moral of the story: The wider the lens is... The more it lets the light to enter and the clearer the image is...
is 4” good? that sounds incredibly weird out of context
but yeah i got a 4.2ish inch diameter lens… is that good for a telescope? what can i see with that in a sorta city like area? planets?
@@MoyuGuy😅😂
Can sm1 explain me how my samsung 22 ultra has the same quality n zoom on the moon as the telescope number 2. I always wanted a telescope, i thought i can observe the planets cleary with it 😕 im dissapointed
@@la_sofi I think apart from the lenses and camera quality that thing also uses AI and some softwares to sharpen and improve your image quality... And that's not the case with uhhh... Telescopes..
It also depends on the TYPE of telescope...
The wideness... is aperture.
A reflective telescope uses a mirror to focus light. A refractor uses lenses.
A 4" refractor will allow you to see deep sky objects like galaxies and nebulas. A 8" reflector is great for the moon and planets.
I thought you were about to stick 10 telescopes end to end lol
Thought about it!
If he did that I think he would of he blury vision or maybe you could literly see the surface of the moon
@@babygodzillarblx8514 Nah, resolution is still limited by the diameter of the lens. It's a physical limitation related to the wavelength of light.
Me too❤😂❤
Yeah I was almost let down lol
man your hands are steady
Thanks! I think I did about four or five takes per telescope and picked the steadiest one.
@@LearnToStargazehey how much is the last telescope??
@@Jatt1528 I paid $629 for it in 2010.
@@LearnToStargazeand now that telescope is probably worth in thousands of dollar, man do I envy u, I also wanted to buy a powerful telescope but I am just too broke rn and my part time isn't able to provide me with enough money to buy one sadly
@@yasuki416 most astronomy clubs (and some libraries) have telescopes that they lend out to members.
Thanks for helping me a while back with my telescope, simce then ive took many pictures of the moon, the suns rotation over a month and 8 days, sunspots, and many dso's. Youre one of the youtubers that sparked my interest in the hobby❤
Thanks for the feedback! Glad you found the hobby!
Imagine what is actually looks like not through a phone, must be amazing
Yup, for the Moon and planets, the human eye is much better. For galaxies and Nebula that require long exposures, cameras show a more detailed image.
It's insane, I bought an 8in dobsonian telescope and it has been the best thing I have ever bought. Seeing Jupiter and saturn with ur own eyes for the first time is magical let alone other galaxies and nebula. Highly recommend buying a telescope
@@z_e_r_o1216 how much was it?
@@turritopsisrockola I bought an 8 inch Dobsonian a couple of weeks ago. It was £445. You can get cheaper ones but you get a better focuser and other parts by not buying at the lowest price.
Even as a kid with my $20 cheap one it used to be amazingly scary to look through so imagine these are breathtaking
Damn that final giant black reflector telescope is about almost the size of an old vintage World War II canon
That doesn’t even look like a reflector telescope at all looks more like a giant weapon
I thought I saw Sirius, the dog star running across your lawn.
Moon looks the best through 400mm imo. You can, of course zoom in and use extra attachments but the 400mm always takes beautiful pix with the 22 eye piece and 10 if you wanna taje a closer look
Thank you for this. It was AMAZING!!!❤❤❤
Best n best Image I have seen......100/100 for your work...
Love telescopes. I’ve been watching the moon a lot through my Orion astro view 6. It’s amazing. 150mm aperture and 750mm focal. At 150x magnification the moon looks awesome.
Is it good for watching saturn
@@arnabsengupta8092 Yeah it works great for Saturn and Jupiter.
One day I'll buy a telescope 🔭
🗿
That day may never come...
It's much cheaper if you build it from a kit. Much research is needed though too to avoid buying twice or more. Great hobby though.
One day I'll buy a trip to the moon
Why not do it today? I was watching Saturn and its rings for 2 days in a row. What were you doing? Cause uou could be doing the same. I love watcging Saturns moons
Thanks for this video. I am just getting into astronomy and this really lays it out there. It’s surprisingly hard to find a source that lays out the basics without overwhelming you. You got yourself a new subscriber.
Welcome!
I saw a dog running on snow on the moon 😅😂
Wow
Cant wait for a clear moonlit night to see it through my 8” Celestron dob.
Great video!
Great video bro. Like the the slide top 10
The moon looks great thru any telescope - even binoculars. Nice video.
I would be so happy to have ONE quality telescope and you have 10+? Amazing! You must be having an amazing time looking at what I could only dream of seeing and I am so very thankful you share what you see!!
So which telescope is the king of them all? Just in case I ever get enough money for one - right now I make due with my stabilized binoculars which are a godsend for these old eyes!
I had a cheap kids telescope way back when and managed to see the rings of Saturn, the moons of Jupiter, our own moon, the Andromeda galaxy and Mars. Every sighting amazed me but the best was when I caught a shooting star while looking through my telescope - what are the chances of that?!
Again, thank you for sharing!
The 12 inch Dobsonian is the king for sure! It’s not easy to move around though, the SCT is my favorite all purpose telescope.
I had a 12" once and the moon through it is stupefying.You'd think moon surface was either superfine dust or superfine mud.
I wanna say that 1500mm and a 4mm eyepiece plus 4x barlow now thats amazing for the moon, but the best is for planets! (id reccomend dobsonian)
That would be 1500x magnification. That’s more then the Hubble space telescope I assume!
I mean yeah, it is really big magnification, i seen pluto with it, its amazing.
Damn that is super cool. Kind of makes me want to get into the hobby. I don't know how I never really thought to do it before this video lol
It’s a fun hobby! Gets expensive thought!
Starts slow. Get a cheap telescope and learn how to use the lenses. Once you get into it, move to a larger ones. Just avoid the $20-50 kid ones from pkaces like big lots. Those are frustrating and usually bad quality lenses. Will make uou lose the interest in the hobby. Those are good for kids.
#1 looks like an amazing 🤩😍 telescope
The smallest telescope I've ever looked at the Moon in is my 5x10 Zeiss Mini Quick Monocular, obviously hand held, and it gives some pretty fair views.I was going to look tonight but clouds have rolled in!
Amazing!!
Nice to see some explore scientific scopes!
Some of my favourite!
I really thought that in the first telescope a dog was running on the moon 🕴️
Amazing how Newtonian amd refractors always got the cleanest image
Verses what? SCTs?
@@LearnToStargaze mainly because of the Schmidt corrector of the SCT.
It was very hard to get pinpoint stars from them. Especially on the earlier versions from Meade and Celestron which actually used plate glass that was coated
Wow #1 was really great . You could make a map with that .
I did write a book with it, and the book won the Simon Newcomb award :-)
through the last one id watch all night and look for comets or aliens while high xD
I'm surprised the fancy carbon fiber ED scope had the most CA! The view from the LT 70 AZ is surprising when you know how inexpensive it is. Best view was obviously the big dob ;)
With moon works one thing. Result can be better if you re master in focusing. With 60mm refractor i got image on level with 150mm, so if someone interesting to observe the moon you needn t have a big aperture telescope
Just note that resolution is determined by aperture alone. 60 can get a great image, but cannot match the resolution.
Dobsonian killed it...😃
Always does.
Which telescope is best for planet gazing....with good clarity of view. Especially around 1000 or 1200 dollars
A nice 6inch (150mm) Mak would be great for planets in that price range. Explore scientific, Orion, and Meade all have this. You’d just need to add a nice tracking mount.
Celestron edge HD 800
Thank you for sharing!😊
I'm Antonio from Italy, fantastic challenge ! I like the astronomy and i have one telescope "Skywatcher heritage 130/650" very good for planets.
Dobsonian is so great for observation and easy to use, cheap.
Mine is 1100 focal length
I think I'm choosing a 10 inch stellalyra for my next telescope
Looks like a great Dobsonian!
Hi John, I posted some images of the Moon at 11,200mm focal length on my YT community page if you want to see really close up! it was an Edge 11 + 4x Powermate
Just subscribed to your channel!
@@LearnToStargaze Thanks John!
I sometimes set up my XT8 Dobsonian (not enough aperture!!) along with the 4.5 EQ, or 3" table top reflector, and/or the 15x70 binoculars on tripod just to compare views. ...some open clusters really do look better through a smaller instrument, since all the clutter of small stars in the field don't defeat the pattern. I love Pleiades through even 7x50 binos, and M6 and 7 have advantages with smaller optics. ...the moon.....? When I want to see detail at terminator or in craters, more aperture (and adjustable polarizing filter) is king. Saving for a 12" dob, and if I'm patient, a 16". Great video, as usual. Thanks.
If we use those telescope, may we finally see uranus, neptune, pluto, the dwarf planets, & the galaxy?
What do you mean “finally”?
@@LearnToStargaze you know. The things we might see with these telescopes in space?
Loved your dog
Thanks!
NEWTONIAN AND DOBSONIANS ARE KINGS
I was hoping to see a comparison of your c90 and the c8, the MAKs supposed to be really good at the moon and I wonder how they fare against an SCT even at significant aperture differences. Great vid, thanks!
Observing space would be my hobby if only it were possible to observe other celestial bodies with the image quality seen in this video. Because from what I've seen, Saturn observed through a home telescope looks like some cheap 3D render.
You just need more aperture. Jupiter and Saturn look like this in a nice 14 inch SCT telescope with lucky imaging.
Can I get know that which telescope is best for $300???
Used 6 inch Dobsonian
Man I am struggling to buy a $50 telescope and here you are showing a ton of telescopes😢
These days the companies just send them to me.
I buy most of my telescopes used though.
Beautiful
thank you for sharing
I used mines and the moon was so up close that I could see craters, small and big.
@LofiCrooz you can't see that close goofy
Hey man which telescope do you really recommend and which telescope do you like the most?
Currently, I like a large donsonian for stargazing and a tiny refractor like the Askar 180 for taking photos.
View through num 1 the zhummel z12 was very good but so would the I imagine £1000 over price tag .
Not sure if they make that one anymore. I paid $629 for it back in 2010.
@Learntostargaze
May you be willing to share my Moon’s photo taken with a Celestron 80GTL?
I don’t have that telescope.
I have a Nikon p600 camera and love taking close ups of the moon.
I have that last one!!!
Nice!
Amazing that not one single person has caught on video a meteor hitting the Moon. Yet, all those craters.
What are you talking about? Lots of people have caught meteors hitting the Moon. Video astronomy is very popular, follow deepskydude on Facebook/Instagram he’ll post videos when he catches events like this on film.
Was expecting to see a an alien singing in the shower in that last pic 😂
Weird!
I use a 114-900 telescope and I get amazing results
Which 2 Telescope Is Best For Viewing Deep sky in these Telescopes that you're showing
The 12 inch Dobsonian, followed by the C8.
@@LearnToStargaze thanks
A Nikon P900 camera gets as close as the closest shot shown here. Got to wonder what sort of price difference occurs there?
“Close” is irrelevant with telescopes, it’s resolution that is important, and that is 100% aperture dependent. Is the lens of a Nikon 12 inches across?
@@LearnToStargaze I've seen videos from them, I do not have one. I do have a Celestron 80. I was a bit let down with the level of magnification, but it was a gift, so we must keep this between ourselves.
@@toddburgess6792 yes, the Celestron 80 has a smaller aperture than I would recommend even for a beginner. Any magnification can be achieved with any telescope simply by changing the eyepiece.
Cool bruh!
That seems pretty amazing!
Can you please help me, I wanted to know if Unistellar eVscope 2 Digital Telescope can click better images of the moon as a telescope?
I am a newbie in this hobby...😓
The unistellar would be about as good on the Moon as a DSLR on a star tracker. For taking pictures of space, a simple DSLR on a star tracker would provide much more pleasing images. Keep in mind the “hobby” you’re taking about is astrophotography, this has little to do with stargazing or beginner telescopes.
@@LearnToStargaze I appreciate your effort in the reply.
So, can you please name some telescopes for astrophotography that are not only amazing for capturing detailed photos of moon or planets, but also of nearby galaxies?
Thanks
@@FahadKhan_3007 sure thing. For closeup images of galaxies the optimal beginner astrophotography telescope would be a Celestron Edge HD sct (the bigger the better, they range in aperture from 8inches to 14 inches). You could mount this to EQ6R pro mount, and use a ASI2600mc color camera. Add an autoguider kit and an ASIair Plus to control it all, and that would make a pretty good basic set up for what you’re taking about.
@@LearnToStargaze Thanks a lot for the help, will surely try finding that one in the store! :)
so would you say the celestron 70AZ is better or the celestron 100AZ overall considering other factors? just wondering as I'd like to purchase one, and if the 70AZ is just as good it's cheaper so will be much better for me :)
The 70az may only provide better views of Jupiter. The 100 would be better at everything else. A telescope’s resolution and light gathering ability is determined by aperture.
bro got a tiny hubble telescope
Nice comparison! How come that Explore Scientific ED 102 CF had such a bad chromatic aberration? With it's ED glass and air spaced triplet objective it shouldn't have any. Or did it come from the eyepiece?
Definitely the eyepiece.
I’m not sure if you might see this, but lately I’ve been staring at the sky and the moon. So I was thinking on buying a telescope on a budget, I was wondering if you could recommend me a cheap or starter telescope?😅
Hi! Most cheap telescope are actually just toys and not designed for actually looking at space. I put a list of telescope a every price point on the homepage of LearnToStargaze.com . Check it out :-)
this was so helpful, your website was great!
the telescope i found on the side of the road gives a closer clearer shot of the moon then all of those..
What telescope? Please share the images!
Wow no wayy!!!!
I bought a $30 telescope for my kids. We looked at the moon and got arc eye for looking too long. You could feel the heat coming through the lens
That’s why telescopes generally come with these: www.amazon.com/Orion-1-25-Inch-Percent-Transmission-Filter/dp/B0000XMUWS
I always wonder what it looks like with eye. I wish i could see it once💔
Do you have a local astronomy club you can visit?
The moon looked like that the other morning without a telescope 😂
If you have eyes like a cartoon character, sure.
Is an 130mm telescope worse than an 150mm one? I ordered an 130mm and I am sad I could have bought 150mm had the money
Generally yes, but aperture is not the only thing that matters. The quality of the mount etc is a very large part of the enjoyment.
@@LearnToStargaze yoo I got the 150p and its sick its awesome I love it, there is 1 problem, it's open, can it get harmed easily?
@@Markaras there should be a cap for the aperture.
@@JohnReadAuthor yo why is jupiter white? I look at jupiter and its moons but it's white I can't see the colors, this happens to mars too
@@Markaras That’s because it’s bright. Stare at it for a while or use a filter to tone down the brightness. A blue filter helps bring out detail on Jupiter.
Give me some Ideas to stack/Capture galaxies and nebulae
I use the ASIair app/device and do it all on the phone.
der hund suegt am meisten hahahaha 😂😅😊
What do you have against dogs?
Poor comparisons. You need to use approximately the same magnification with the lunar edge in view to compare chromatic aberration
Whatever. It was fun.
nice dog😊
Awesome!
Can you spot the "Great red spot"?
Yes, on Jupiter half the time.
Ngl the last one looks like a mortar lol
Nice! Thank You. I appreciate the honesty! There are a few liars in these “stargazer” type videos. This guy seems to be real.
Yes, it’s a challenge to show what the human eye can see, vs what a camera would see. I think there are a lot of stargazing TH-camrs who could do a better job separating the hobby of stargazing with the hobby of space photography.
Wouldnt' it be great if it worked to line up the 10 telescopes so each one used the one in front to magnify what you wanted to see?
I know it does not work like that ( i tried it) but it would be amazing if it did.
It works if you place them side by side and align them to within the wavelength of light. Can be done for less than $1 million these days.
Best Telescope To Buy As A Beginner
The best would be a Celestron Evolution 8, or a collapsible truss tube 12 inch Dobsonian. Note these are for visual astronomy only. The answer would be different if it depends on your budget.
Bro the first telescope looks so good and only costs 90$ 💀
It works well as long as you add a $500 mount and you only care about looking at the Moon and a few bright star clusters.
@@LearnToStargaze yes, for me the best is the last one, I don't know too much of telescopes but it looks so good and it doesn't costs so much.
Edit: the best for that range of price obviously.
Which telescope is best for beginners?? To see moon, planets, galaxies, nebulas and in deep space? Please suggest me
Hi! Dobsonians are best for beginners. Look for 6 or 8 inches of aperture.
Look at the moon details on 2032mm one ❤️
and then theres samsung whos getting 4k dolby vision hdr 100% dcip color gamut srgb ntsc shots of moon with their 1cm diameter camera lens
They’re not getting anything but an AI generated image.
Thanks for the concise video showing the comparisons! Question, have you personally ever seen anything anomalous with your observations of the Moon?
I’ve looked at the sky and/or moon pretty much every cloudless night for the past 15 years. I’ve never seen anything I couldn’t explain.
@@LearnToStargaze Interesting... so no UFO / UAP's or weird structures that you could see at all? This is a genuine question as a few other channels that use telescopes have apparently seen "things" flying around... even casting a shadow on the Moon. Would love to get your thoughts on this, thanks again!
@@xanavinismo2003 that stuff is far too stupid to waste any time on. We have telescopes that watch the entire sky literally 100% of the time, and modern astronomers have never picked up anything remotely unexplained within our solar system.
Seestar s50.. Save thousands!
I use the SeeStar all the time, but it doesn’t have the aperture for closeup moon shots.
Hello and i have a question: can you please tell me how much was the 2032m telescope please?
I think I bought it on EBay about 2 years ago for about $320. It’s a Celestron C8.
I am a newbie and looking to one of these ones, can anyone here tell me what pointers should be ticked to watch all these beautiful planets ?? 😢
Look at my 5 rules and 3 red flags TH-cam short.
All of them looks the same but one and two they look like we’re already on the moon
That’s because resolution scales with aperture and magnification scales with focal length. The last two were the only telescopes with both high aperture AND high focal length.
I'm only interested in seeing Chandrayaan's satellites or rides on the moon through a telescope
This comment makes no sense on many levels.
Thank you❤
I have been looking for a star gazing spot and a telescope I have around 50 dollars to buy one can you recommend one?
For $50 7x10 binoculars are the way to go. Dark skies are a must. Google “light pollution map” and look for a blue or grey zone.
Would you recommend using Astromaster 70 az without the Finderscope?
I barely recommend using an astromaster telescope at all, haha. But no, using a telescope without a finder would be no fun at all.
First I thought W t f**k Dog on MOON
So, the bigger the focal length, the higher the magnification?
Focal length divided by eyepiece focal length is magnification. So if you’re using the same eyepiece and move to a higher focal length telescope, magnification will increase. In general, lower magnification is better for nebulae and star clusters. Higher magnification is better for planets.
@@LearnToStargaze Thank you for your help.
I thought he was going to combine all of them to make one super telescope
If only I had perfected laser interferometry in the visual spectrum….
did you add anything to the telescope to enhance their full potential of zooming in or are they stock(out of the box and point)?
Just changed to a two inch barrel eyepieces when I went up to the larger telescope. Zoom does not increase image quality. Aperture does that.
@@LearnToStargaze thank for the reply! I'm looking to get one like the first one.. that view is insane! Do you happen to have a part number on those 2" barrels?
@@JayLupe the number 1 telescope was a 12 inch Dobsonian. The eyepieces was a Meade 5000 series Ultra Wide Field. Not sure they make the eyepiece anymore, but you may be able to find it somewhere used. The Baader Hyperion eyepieces are similar (they fit both 1.25 and 2 inch barrels).
@@LearnToStargazeawesome thanks man. keep up the great content!
Wow. Me and my dad found my grandpa's old Bausch and lamb 4000 model telescope and it can see the moon PRETTY well with an 18mm lens. Is it more mm is more magnification? Or is it the opposite lol
Less magnification is more. Classic telescope!!
@@LearnToStargaze thanks! Yea it's really beautiful. It's got a rotating base that plugs in to offset the earth's rotation while you're viewing celestial objects. I'm trying to view Saturn tonight! Cheers!
Ah yes my favourite telescope: *dog*
😂