by Alice Enevoldsen - Planetarium Specialist
Looking for →Seattle
Stargazing?
What Telescope Should I Buy For _____?
I
get asked this question regularly. I wish I could just say
"learn enough about telescopes and the night sky so you can
answer that question yourself," but that advice is ignored
because it is unsatisfactory. If you press me for an
answer, this is what you'll get.
Half of this is from guest blogger Keith Enevoldsen (my
dad! →thinkzone.wlonk.com) who didn't know he was writing for
this blog when he wrote these words, but it is sound
advice and well worded.
Your First
Telescope:

Price:
Telescopes less than about $200 generally have poor optics. If you want to go much below about $200, then get some quality binoculars instead.
Orion StarBlast:
I also have to admit that Orion got me with this one. They donated a StarBlast to Pacific Science Center. I was quite skeptical at first, since I love the AstroScan, and I didn't believe that anything could measure up. After I used it a few times I was sold. It's a good scope. If I were buying a new scope, I'd buy an AstroScan, but this would be a close second.
Both of these scopes are compatible with all the normal-sized eyepieces available on the market. Most telescopes you get from a department store use a different sized opening, so you need to use their eyepieces, and you can't slowly upgrade over time.
Binoculars:
What's Good for Beginners To Look At:
Remember, the Moon is by far the best thing to look at in the sky. The Moon looks huge and fantastic with a wide-field telescope like the Astroscan -- you can see the whole Moon and lots of craters. The Moon also looks pretty good through good binoculars. The Moon changes every day -- you see different craters each day. You don't need dark skies to see the Moon. You can see some other things with a backyard telescope (that you can't see with binoculars), like the rings of Saturn, and nebulas, but almost everything is very tiny or very faint compared to the Moon.
If you want higher magnification, so you can clearly see the stripes on Jupiter, the icecaps on Mars, and the gap in the rings of Saturn, then you will have the problem of how to accurately point a telescope with high magnification, and how to continually move the telescope to counteract the turning of the earth. The best solution is to use a computer and a motor to point the telescope, but this gets expensive. But the cheaper manual fiddly knobs are a pain. Also, if you don't use a computer to aim your telescope, you need to be sure you have a good finder scope mounted on the side.
This is why I recommend a wide-field telescope like the AstroScan (or good binoculars) for beginners.
Want More?
Advice from Sky and Telescope:
→skyandtelescope.com
More detailed advice: →scopereviews.com
Want Even More?
Keep up with all of Alice’s Astro Info postings at her →Astro Info blog. If you have a site of your own and would like to add some very astute astronomical content, embed the widget below. Just click the share button.
About AstroInfo
Pacific Science Center's Planetarium and Stage Science department has an ongoing commitment to lifelong learning and keeping our teachers up-to-date with current astronomical happenings and discoveries. The approximately-monthly column "AstroInfo," written by Planetarium Specialist Alice Enevoldsen, is an attempt to answer common astronomical questions from the staff, and highlight interesting goings-on in the world of astronomy. If you have questions you would like addressed, please →email Alice.
AstroInfo is aimed at an audience of inquisitive adults, and we hope that everyone enjoys it.
About Alice Enevoldsen
Alice Enevoldsen has been working in planetariums since 1996, has a B.A. in Astronomy-Geology from Whitman College, and a Masters in Teaching from Seattle University. Her fascination with the stars led her to try her hand at astronomy research in Boston and Walla Walla, where she realized that her calling in life was actually to work in museums and be a translator for scientists. Now she works hard to show people who think science is confusing or hard why chemists, physicists, and biologists get so worked up - science is everywhere, and life's boring without discovery!