Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 4, 2014 22:04:33 GMT
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scopemobile
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home town/country: Glasgow/Scotland
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Post by scopemobile on Jul 16, 2014 8:19:38 GMT
uncle john here, hi shevill, I've no experience or education on spectroscopy, do you think its possible to integrate it into live video ,[ie an information bar below the video output on the computer screen ,showing the spikes, and naming the elements of the objects being viewed]. also is there any information coming out of light reflecting objects[moon]compared to light emitting objects [sun],or is it all scattered. in the case of distant objects, would there be enough pixels containing this info. would the field of view need to be narrow to isolate each star,or cross hairs on the screen suffice. I could imagine prospectors polishing their picks and shovels if they saw an approaching asteroid contained gold ,platinum, or diamonds. john
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Post by davy on Jul 16, 2014 9:47:33 GMT
Jumping in deep end uncle john..not been able to get any more diagrams for lx90
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Post by Deleted on Jul 16, 2014 10:53:30 GMT
uncle john here, hi shevill, I've no experience or education on spectroscopy, do you think its possible to integrate it into live video ,[ie an information bar below the video output on the computer screen ,showing the spikes, and naming the elements of the objects being viewed]. also is there any information coming out of light reflecting objects[moon]compared to light emitting objects [sun],or is it all scattered. in the case of distant objects, would there be enough pixels containing this info. would the field of view need to be narrow to isolate each star,or cross hairs on the screen suffice. I could imagine prospectors polishing their picks and shovels if they saw an approaching asteroid contained gold ,platinum, or diamonds. john Hi Uncle John,
Not something I have ever tried, what I would suggest is you post this question on the Spectroscopy group: groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/astronomical_spectroscopy/info
My involvement in spectroscopy has been limited to developing/building the 200 micron fibre head and feed system on professional size telescopes and 1.5 Million dollar double beam spectrograph, weighing in at 300kg plus.
Had a visit last year by Ken Harrison, the clever fellow who designed & kitted the L200 Spectrograph, now supplied by JTW in the UK
Clear skies... Shevill
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