home > how to > astrophotography

Of Pixel Size and Focal Reducers

Before you purchase a CCD, weigh the options possible when focal reducers are added to the imaging system.

by Dennis di Cicco

Veil Nebula
Digital cameras are not well known for their wide-field imaging abilities. Nevertheless, when a chip’s pixel size is properly matched to a telescope’s focal length, some of today’s CCDs can cover a considerable amount of sky. David Hanon of Ringgold, Georgia, captured this 11/4°-tall view of the eastern Veil Nebula with an SBIG ST-8 camera equipped with a KAF-1600 CCD. His 20-minute exposure was with a 7-inch Astro-Physics refractor operating at f/6 with a focal reducer.
Courtesy David Hanon.
The scene played with the predictability of a well-rehearsed script. On a half dozen occasions visitors stopped by while I was testing two high-end digital cameras during the late 1990s. Each knew about the Kodak KAF-1600 and KAF-1000 CCDs in these cameras, but none had seen them firsthand. Handing each person the first camera, I would click the computer’s mouse to snap open the shutter and reveal the Chiclet-size KAF-1600. With almost 20 times the imaging area of chips in early cameras marketed to amateur astronomers, this CCD impressed everyone.

Nevertheless, when the shutter clicked open on the KAF-1000 camera, jaws dropped. "Now that’s a CCD!" exclaimed one guest. Measuring 1 inch square, this chip offers only slightly less imaging area than a frame of 35-millimeter film. While everyone was predictably fascinated by this expensive bit of silicon real estate, blank stares followed my comment that, at a given resolution, I could capture more sky with the KAF-1600 despite its substantially smaller size.

How can this be? Even a quick glance reveals the KAF-1000 to be considerably larger — 4.65 times, to be precise — than the KAF-1600. The key to this paradox, however, was my qualifying statement that at a given resolution the KAF-1600 covers more sky.

Most of us photographers never think much about resolution. Today’s emulsions have relatively fine grain, and we use the same film with telescopes big and small. As such, the larger the piece of film, the more sky will be captured up to the point where optical or mechanical considerations limit the field of view.

CCDs, however, are a different story. Pixels — the individual, light-sensitive picture elements that make up the checkerboard array of a chip’s imaging area — come in many sizes. The detectors found in today’s popular cameras have square or slightly rectangular pixels ranging from about 7 to almost 30 microns (thousandths of a millimeter) across. The best results occur when a pixel’s size is matched to a telescope’s resolution under a given set of observing conditions. For example, conventional wisdom suggests that the astronomical seeing conditions experienced by a typical backyard observer will produce excellent deep-sky images with pixels that cover about 2 arcseconds (2") of sky.

Even a glance reveals the dramatic difference in physical size between the Kodak KAF-1600 (left) and KAF-1000 chips. But, as explained in the text, at a given resolution the KAF-1600’s 1.6 million pixels can cover 60 percent more sky despite having only about one-fifth the area of the KAF-1000.
Sky & Telescope / Chuck Baker
With this criterion established, the paradox is quickly resolved. If you adopt a given pixel scale such as 2" for deep-sky imaging, then you need only remember that the more pixels a chip has the more sky it will cover regardless of the chip’s physical size.

Consider the CCDs mentioned above. The KAF-1000 has 1 million 24-micron pixels arranged in an array measuring 1,024 pixels on a side. At 2" per pixel, the detector covers a field 2,048" (about 34') square. The KAF-1600, on the other hand, has 1.6 million 9-micron pixels assembled in a 1,552-by-1,032-pixel array. At the same scale, this chip covers a field measuring 3,104" by 2,064" (about 52' by 34'). The KAF-1600 has 60 percent more pixels than the KAF-1000 and should therefore cover 60 percent more sky.

There is a catch, however. Obtaining the same 2"-per-pixel scale for these detectors necessitates very different effective focal lengths. Indeed, the KAF-1000’s larger pixels require an effective focal length of 2,475 mm (about 97 inches), while the smaller KAF-1600 pixels need only 928 mm (about 37 inches). The nomogram on the next page makes simple work of determining the relationships between pixel size, focal length, and a pixel’s image scale.



Sky Publishing, a New Track Media Company
Copyright © 2013 New Track Media. All rights reserved.
Sky & Telescope, Night Sky, and SkyandTelescope.com are registered trademarks of New Track Media