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  2. Afocal photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afocal_photography

    Afocal photography works with any system that can produce a virtual image of parallel light, for example telescopes and microscopes. Afocal photographic setups work because the imaging device's eyepiece produces collimated light and with the camera's lens focused at infinity, creating an afocal system with no net convergence or divergence in the light path between the two devices. [2]

  3. Vera C. Rubin Observatory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vera_C._Rubin_Observatory

    The telescope uses a novel three-mirror design, a variant of three-mirror anastigmat, which allows a compact telescope to deliver sharp images over a very wide 3.5-degree-diameter field of view. Images will be recorded by a 3.2-gigapixel charge-coupled device imaging (CCD) camera, the largest digital camera ever constructed. [16]

  4. Cold camera photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_camera_photography

    Guerra Cryogenic Camera ad in May, 1974 Sky & Telescope. Cold camera photography is a technique used by astrophotographers to reduce the electronic noise that accumulates during long exposures with the electronic sensors in DSLRs and dedicated CMOS or CCD astro-cameras. Cooling is usually accomplished with a Peltier thermo-electric cooler.

  5. Autoguider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoguider

    Spectrography setup with autoguider (the autoguider camera body is attached to the finderscope, top right, and the guiding computer, bottom right).. An autoguider is an automatic electronic guidance tool used in astronomy to keep a telescope pointed precisely at an object being observed.

  6. Photometry (astronomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photometry_(astronomy)

    A CCD (charge-coupled device) camera is essentially a grid of photometers, simultaneously measuring and recording the photons coming from all the sources in the field of view. Because each CCD image records the photometry of multiple objects at once, various forms of photometric extraction can be performed on the recorded data; typically ...

  7. Hubble Space Telescope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubble_Space_Telescope

    The instrument contained eight charge-coupled device (CCD) chips divided between two cameras, each using four CCDs. Each CCD has a resolution of 0.64 megapixels. [57] The wide field camera (WFC) covered a large angular field at the expense of resolution, while the planetary camera (PC) took images at a longer effective focal length than the WF ...

  8. Wide Field Camera 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wide_Field_Camera_3

    The Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) is the Hubble Space Telescope's last and most technologically advanced instrument to take images in the visible spectrum. It was installed as a replacement for the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 during the first spacewalk of Space Shuttle mission STS-125 (Hubble Space Telescope Servicing Mission 4) on May 14, 2009.

  9. Flat-field correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat-field_correction

    The photographer must then adjust the exposure of their imaging device (charge-coupled device (CCD) or digital single-lens reflex camera (DSLR) ) so that when the histogram of the image is viewed, a peak reaching about 40–70% of the dynamic range (maximum range of pixel values) of the imaging device is seen. The photographer typically takes ...