OBSERVING REPORT by Don Ferguson
36 JUNE 2019 • SKY & TELESCOPE
The Dawes Limit
D
istinguishing the binary nature of a star at
the Dawes limit is a stringent test of visual
acuity at the telescope’s limit of resolution, with
atmospheric conditions playing no small role.
Phillip Kane’s “Find Your Dawes Limit” (S&T:
Sept. 2016, p. 30) provided the catalyst for me
to fi nd closure on unresolved double star issues
that had accumulated for decades. His “grand
list of test stars” is outstanding and was almost
up-to-date. I decided to accept his challenge.
The Dawes and
Sparrow Limits
Observers use the ability to separate double
stars as a proxy for a telescope’s resolving
power. Enlarged images of close double stars as
seen in a telescope without a central obstruction
at decreasing separations are simulated at right.
According to the Dawes criterion, resolution is
predicated on the perception of a drop in the
light intensity (dark notches) fl anking the closely
merged star images. In his Catalogue, Dawes
concludes this is the closest that two stars can
overlap and still be recognized as individual
objects. The criterion culminates in his famous
Dawes’ limit equation
The author fi nds that two of his telescopes have somewhat different — lower! —
Dawes’ limits than what theory predicts.
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r = ,
4.56′′
a