Friday, May 31, 2019

Singlularity Observatory Telescope Gone Wild







The bottom left photo shows an image of M27 taken through the normal telescope at a normal focal ratio. The top image shows the exact same object but with the enhancements of amping, dialectrics, and the incredible fast add-on lensing combination of f1.75. The new image shows spectacular differences in color, contrast, image scale, nebulosity, and deep stellar magnitude penetration, all improved to a fantastic level, making the 1,325-inch telescope in a new league of its own. This telescope has Chameleon type qualities, able to reconfigure from one type of telescope into another and another. There is the wild possibility that nearly every new image taken with this spectacular telescope will become a new discovery image. Note: unless you're looking at this large image comparison on a big screen computer, the full effect may not be visible on small mobile devices.

Telescope Gone Wild
Humanoido, Director of Singularity Observatory and the Astrophysics Lab at United Humanoido Laboratories, has incredibly taken the 1,325-inch diameter Amped Dialectric telescope and changed its design into a new one with the ultimate focal ratio of an incredibly fast f/1.75 system.

The redesign was possible using a doubling of multi optic sets and the raw coupling plates from Charge Coupled Devices. At f1.75, this extreme fast lensing and reflective telescope acts like a fast ultra large massive Schmidt Camera, and shows a mind boggling amount of celestial objects and detail like never before.

The technique is derived in part by using specific combinations of optics calculated mathematically to provide the significant change in EFL. Lenses and optical set arrays from at least four optical companies provide the part combinations necessary to drive the 1325. A fifth company provided the optical charge coupling plates. Company suppliers are located in the United States, Germany, Canada, and China. Some of these lenses have special precision dialectrics to improve performance.