Telescope Magnification Calculator

Calculate telescope magnification (M = f_obj / f_eye), maximum useful magnification, true field of view, exit pupil, light gathering power, and angular resolution (Dawes limit & Rayleigh limit).

mm
mm
Magnification
Focal Ratio (f/)
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
mm
mm
Magnification
Magnification with Barlow
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
mm
mm
mm
nm

Optical Performance

Magnification
Focal Ratio (f/)
Exit Pupil
Light Gathering vs Eye

Resolution Limits

Dawes' Limit (116/D)
Rayleigh Limit (1.22λ/D)

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter objective focal length and eyepiece focal length for instant magnification.
  2. Use Max Magnification tab to find the upper limit for your aperture.
  3. Use Field of View tab with eyepiece apparent FOV to get true sky FOV.
  4. Switch to Professional for exit pupil, light gathering power, Dawes limit, and Rayleigh limit.

Formula

M = f_obj / f_eye

Exit Pupil = D / M  |  Light Gathering = (D/7)²

Dawes Limit = 116/D_mm arcsec  |  Rayleigh = 1.22λ/D rad

Example

Example: 1000 mm objective, 25 mm eyepiece → M = 40×. Aperture 100 mm → exit pupil = 2.5 mm, Dawes limit = 1.16 arcsec.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Magnification M = focal length of objective (mm) ÷ focal length of eyepiece (mm). A 1000 mm telescope with a 25 mm eyepiece gives 40× magnification.
  • A practical rule is 50× per inch of aperture (or 2× per mm). Above this, images become dim and blurry. So a 100 mm telescope has a maximum useful magnification of about 200×.
  • Exit pupil = aperture ÷ magnification. At night the human eye dilates to ~7 mm. An exit pupil larger than 7 mm wastes light. An exit pupil of 3–7 mm is ideal for most visual observing.
  • Dawes' Limit is the empirical angular resolution of a telescope: 116 / D_mm arcseconds. A 100 mm telescope resolves objects separated by 1.16 arcseconds. The theoretical Rayleigh limit uses 1.22λ/D.
  • A Barlow lens multiplies the effective focal length of the telescope. A ×2 Barlow doubles magnification: with a 40× eyepiece you get 80×. It also reduces exit pupil proportionally.

Related Calculators

Sources & References (5)
  1. Telescope Math — Sky & Telescope — Sky & Telescope
  2. NASA Telescope Basics — NASA Science
  3. University Physics Vol 3, Ch 2: Geometric Optics — OpenStax
  4. Celestron Educational Resources — Optics — Celestron
  5. HyperPhysics — Telescope — Georgia State University HyperPhysics