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Standard eyepieces are relatively inexpensive designs which function very well.
These include the types of eyepieces normally included with telescopes.
The apparent field of view of a standard eyepiece
is usually in the range of 40-50°.
Early Eyepiece Designs
The first telescope eyepieces, such as those used by Galileo, consisted of a
single lens. (See the Understanding Eyepieces section for details on how eyepieces function in
general.) Single-lens eyepieces suffer from a number of
aberrations and
provide only a narrow field of view. The first compound eyepiece, using
two lens elements, was not developed until 1703, nearly 100 years after
Galileo's first observations with a telescope. The eyepiece was invented
by Christian Huygens, discoverer of Saturn's moon Titan (after whom the space
probe which explored this moon three centuries later was named).

Above: Optical diagram of a Huygens eyepiece
A similar design was developed in 1783 by Ramsden. The Ramsden eyepiece
is essentially a Huygens eyepiece with the bottom lens element reversed.
This provided slightly improved image quality. Still, these eyepieces are
limited in their usefulness on all but very long focal ratio telescopes.
Huygens and Ramsdens are still found today on inexpensive department-store-type
telescopes.
Improved Eyepiece Designs
Simple eyepieces like Huygens and Ramsden designs suffer from
chromatic
aberration and narrow fields of view. In 1849, Kellner introduced the
first achromatic eyepiece. It minimized chromatic aberrations and provided
a relatively wide field of view. This design is still common on smaller
telescopes for use at low magnifications.

Above: Optical diagram of a Kellner eyepiece
The orthoscopic eyepiece was invented by Abbe in 1880. "Orthos" are
excellent quality eyepieces, providing high contrast and very good sharpness.
They have short eye relief at short
focal lengths (high power), making them
somewhat difficult to use for planetary viewing for eyeglass-wearers.
However, if eye relief is not a major issue, orthos make excellent planetary
eyepieces.

Above: Optical diagram of an orthoscopic eyepiece
The most common eyepiece today, which is included with most telescope models,
is the Plössl design. The Plössl was invented in 1860 but did not become a
popular eyepiece until the second half of the 20th Century. Like orthos,
Plössls have short eye relief, making them less well-suited to high-power
viewing, although they have excellent image quality.

Above: Optical diagram of a Plössl eyepiece
Standard Eyepiece Prices
Plössl eyepieces are among the most inexpensive designs. These types of
eyepieces start around $30. Mid-range standard eyepieces cost about
$50-60. Very high-quality eyepieces provide better contrast and improved
sharpness, with higher quality coatings. These eyepieces usually cost
around $100-150.
Beyond Standard Eyepieces
Advanced eyepiece designs improve on these types by providing a wider field
of view or by providing longer eye relief. Wide field eyepieces are
excellent for low-power deep-sky viewing, while long-eye-relief designs are good
for planetary and other high-power observing. Other advanced designs
include zoom eyepieces. These are discussed in their respective sections,
linked from the Eyepieces page.

Eyepieces
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