The Barlow lens, named after the English physicist and mathematician Peter Barlow (1776–1862), is an optical tube with diverging lens elements that, used in series with other optics in an optical system, increase the effective focal length of an optical system as perceived by all components that are after it in the system. The practical result is that inserting a Barlow lens magnifies the image. A real Barlow lens is not a single glass element, because that would generate chromatic aberration, and spherical aberration if the lens is not aspheric lens. More common configurations use three or more elements for achromatic lens correction or apochromatic correction and higher image quality.
Astronomical Barlow lenses are rated for the amount of magnification they induce. Most commonly, Barlow lenses are 2x or 3x, but adjustable Barlows are also available. The power of an adjustable Barlow lens is changed by adding an extension tube between the Barlow and the eyepiece to increase the magnification.
The amount of magnification is one more than the distance between the Barlow lens and the eyepiece lens, when the distance is measured in units of the focal length of the Barlow lens. A standard Barlow lens is housed in a tube that is one Barlow focal-length long, so that a focusing lens inserted into the end of the tube will be separated from the Barlow lens at the other end by one Barlow focal-length, and hence produce a 2x magnification over and above what the eyepiece would have produced alone. If the length of a standard 2x Barlow lens' tube is doubled, then the lenses are separated by two Barlow focal lengths and it becomes a 3x Barlow. Similarly, if the tube length is tripled, then the lenses are separated by three Barlow focal lengths and it becomes a 4x Barlow, and so on.
A common misconception is that higher magnification always equates to a higher-quality image. However, the quality of the image is in practice generally limited by the quality of the optics (lenses) or by the atmospheric viewing conditions, not by magnification.
Drawbacks of Barlow lenses include potentially dimming the image, vignetting, reducing sharpness including introducing or worsening chromatic aberration, adding weight to the telescope potentially making it less stable, and reducing the field of view. Higher quality Barlows can offset some of these issues to a degree.
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