EasyManuals Logo

Celestron C4.5 User Manual

Celestron C4.5
60 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #29 background imageLoading...
Page #29 background image
pna--—-—
——————
Polar
Alignment
Definition:
In
order
for
the
telescope
to
track
the
stars
you
must meet
two
criteria.
First,
you
need
a
motor
drive
that
will
move
at
the
same
rate
as
the
Earth
rotates.
As
an
optional
accessory,
Celestron
offers
a
clock
drive
that
also
works
as
a
drive
corrector,
a
device
that
allows
you
to
override
the
rate
of
the
motors
during
astrophotography.
The
second
thing
you
need
is
to
set
the
telescope's
axis
of
rotation
so
that
it
tracks
in
the
right
direction.
Since
the
motion
of
the
stars
across
the
sky
is
caused
by
the
Earth's
rotation
about
it's
axis,
the
telescope's
axis
must
be
made
parallel
to
the
Earth's.
Polar
alignment
is
the
process
by
which
the
telescope's
axis
of
rotation
(called
the
polar
axis)
is
aligned
(made
parallel)
with
the
Earth's
axis
of
rotation.
Once
aligned,
a
telescope
with
a
clock
drive
will
track
the
stars
as
they
move
across
the
sky.
The
result
is
that
objects
observed
through
the
telescope
appear
stationary
(i.e.,
they
will
not
drift
out
of
the
field
of
view).
If
not
using
the
clock
drive,
all
objects
in
the
sky
(day
or
night)
will
slowly
drift
out
of
the
field.
This
motion
is
caused
by
the
Earth's
rotation.
Even
if
you
are
not
using
the
clock
drive,
polar
alignment
is
still
desirable
since
it
will
reduce
the
number
of
corrections
needed
to
follow
an
object
and
limit
all
corrections
to
one
axis
(R.A.).
There
are
several
methods
of
polar
alignment,
all
work
on
a
similar
principle,
but
performed
somewhat
differently.
Each
method
is
considered
separately,
beginning
with
the
easier
methods
and
working
to
the
more
difficult.
Although
there
are
several
methods
mentioned
here,
you
will
never
use
all
of
them
during
one
particular
observing
session.
Instead,
you
may
use
only
one
if
it
is
a
casual
observing
session.
Or,
you
may
use
two
methods;
one
for
rough
alignment
followed
by
a
more
accurate
method
if
you
plan
on
doing
astrophotography.
The
polar
axis
is
the
axis
around
which
the
telescope
rotates
when
moved
in
right
ascension.
This
axis
points
the
same
direction
even
when
the
telescope
moves
in
right
ascension
and
declination.
Figure
5-3
When
the
telescope's
axis
of
rotation
(known
as
the
polar
or
R.A.
axis)
is
parallel
to
the
Earth's
axis,
stars
appear
stationary
when
using
the
optional
clock
drive.
The
process
of
making
the
telescope's
axis
of
rotation
parallel
to
the
Earth's
is
described
in
the
section
on
"Polar
Alignment."
Once
this
is
done,
the
telescope
is
pointed
by
moving
it
in
R.A.
and
DEC.
Astronomy
Basics
*
27

Table of Contents

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Celestron C4.5 and is the answer not in the manual?

Celestron C4.5 Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandCelestron
ModelC4.5
CategoryTelescope
LanguageEnglish

Related product manuals