The Split-Pupil Finder

Designed and built by Jerry Oltion

from ideas by Chuck Lott, Craig Daniels, and others

Featured in the June, 2013 issue of Sky & Telescope Magazine

 

Jerry using split-pupil finderThe Telrad and the Rigel Quickfinder are two of the most popular "unit" (non-magnifying) finders in amateur astronomy today, followed closely by the red-dot or BB-gun finder. All three use the same basic technology: they focus a reticle image at infinity so it will stay put when you move your head from side to side, and you look through the reticle glass at your target.

There's the rub. There's always a piece of glass between your eye and the target, dimming the target's light. There's a glowing reticle on the glass, too, further diminishing your ability to see faint targets. Telrads and Rigels let you blink the reticle on and off so you can see your target, then the reticle, then your target...but you've still got that glass in the way. Wouldn't it be cool if there was some way to let the light from your target fall straight into your eye without going through anything inbetween, yet still be able to see your reticle at whatever intensity you wanted?

Indeed it would be cool. And the gadget that does this is called the split-pupil finder. Particularly the "glow" variety of split-pupil finder. It's one of the simplest, most elegant finders possible, second only to a peep sight in simplicity. It's quite possibly the lightest finder you'll ever use, too. It consists of only three elements: a lens, a glowing arrow, and a stick to hold the two apart at the correct distance. Here's a photo of me looking through one.

 

Chuck's split-pupil finder #1 I belong to a group of amateur telescope makers called the Scopewerks, started by David Davis of Toledo, Oregon. Two of our members, Chuck Lott and Craig Daniels, like to build finders. Chuck has made hundreds of different types, including the infamous 35mm finder described here.

Split pupil effectMany of Chuck's designs (click here for more) use the "split pupil" effect. It's called that because you're using one eye to see two things at once. The upper half of your pupil lets in light from your target, while the lower half of your pupil lets in light from an arrow that points at your target. Both images are combined on your retina to create a superimposed image of your target and the pointer.

That sounds cool enough, but it gets better: When you look through the lens, the arrow is focused at infinity, which means it stays put when you move your head around. (At least until its image slides out of the view of the lens.) And when you move your eye up to the top edge of the lens...magic happens. The arrow begins to slowly fade out, top first, and you begin to see what lies beyond it. You're seeing that directly over the lens, with nothing but air between you and your target. Yet you've got a ghostly arrow pointing right at it. Move your head down a little bit and the arrow grows more distinct. Move it upward, and the target beyond grows more distinct. If that's not the coolest finder concept in the world, I don't know what is.


Chuck likes to make the pointers out of LEDs with variable brightness and various shaped reticles in front of them. Craig got to wondering if he could substitute a strip of glow-in-the-dark tape for the LED, eliminating the need for a battery, LED, wires, dimmer, etc.  He had a bunch of old plastic lenses lying around, so he cut the top off one and mounted it on one end of a length of wood, with the glow-in-the dark arrow stuck to a block on the other side.


Voila! Same split-pupil effect, with just about the simplest materials imaginable.

 

Here's a longer version that I made.

 

Here's what it looks like if you're looking down the body of it with your eye well above the lens. If you're looking at your target (the distant tree top), then the arrow is out of focus because it's too close to your eye. It will also move from side to side as you move your head sideways. (That's called parallax.)

 

When you look through the lens at the arrow, the arrow is in focus and stays put when you move your head around. If you move your eye up to the top of the lens, the arrow starts to fade out and your target appears where the top of the arrow was.  You can bob your head up and down to see one, then the other, or both simultaneously when you hit the sweet spot.

This works best when your eye is close to the lens, and at night when your pupil is dilated. Why does it work best with a dilated pupil? Because a dilated pupil leaves more room for the light to pass over the lens into your eye as well as through the lens into your eye.

How to use the finder

You use this finder to locate objects in the sky the same way you use any finder: look through the lens at the arrow, then swing the telescope around until the arrow points at your target. When you get close, start using the split-pupil effect to refine your aim until the target is resting right on the top of the blunt arrow.

Why the blunt arrow?  Wouldn't it make more sense to make the arrow sharp?  You'd think so, but no. A sharp arrow disappears near the tip from simple lack of brightness rather than from the split pupil effect. A blunt arrow only fades out when you want it to, and it gives you a distinct "landing platform" for your target to rest on, yet it's still very easy to center the object in the middle of that blunt platform. Think of it like a gun sight. The sight is quite wide so you can see it easily, and you rest the target in the middle of the sight.

Why not use both eyes, one for the arrow and the other one for your target?  That way you wouldn't have to bob your head up and down to get the split-pupil effect. You'd have both the arrow and the target in view simultaneously, letting your brain do the integration the way it does naturally.

Ah, the brain. There's the rub. It has evolved to merge two very similar images together and to provide you with a great deal of information about objects' range and motion by interpreting the minute differences between the two images. You don't notice it, but your eyes twitch back and forth dozens of times per second (called "saccadic motion") so your brain can refresh the images it gets off the retinae. If you look at two completely different things, one with each eye, your eyes twitch around with this natural saccadic motion, and they don't necessarily settle down to point in the same direction. In fact, without the same object to lock onto with both eyes, most people's eyes will drift several degrees away from each other, either cross-eyed or wall-eyed. If that happens while you're trying to find an object with this type of finder, you could find yourself pointing several degrees away from your intended target, even though your brain insists that the arrow is right over the target.

So: use one eye.



How do you build a split-pupil finder?

Pretty simple. Find yourself a lens with a focal length that's somewhere around 4-8 inches. Any focal length will do, but really short focal lengths will make for a scrunched-up, hard-to-align finder, while really long ones will make for a big, clumsy stick. Put the lens at one end of the stick and your arrow at the other end, at the focal point of the lens. You can find that point really easy by using the lens to focus sunlight on a card taped to the end of a ruler. Your lens will be resting right over its focal length on the ruler. Careful not to set the card on fire! (Don't use a lamp or a flashlight for this; your focal point will be way off. You need a light source at a near-infinite distance to make this work.)


The body of the finder can be attached to the scope in any way you like that lets you adjust its aim. I use a dowel with a piece of tin (think soup can lid) wrapped around it and screwed to the side of the finder body. I tighten the screw just enough to be snug but still let me twist the finder from side to side and tilt it up and down. I stick the other end of the dowel into a dovetail block so the finder will fit into a standard dovetail mount, but you can mount it any way you like.

That's it.  That simple!  The photo to the right shows the complete package.

Okay, more detail and theory of operation:

You can see in the photos above that I cut the top third or so off the lens. Why do that? A couple of reasons. A flat top surface lets you slide your head from side to side while aiming the telescope and your arrow slides along with it, uniformly visible the entire way. With a rounded top, the arrow fades out due to the curvature of the lens, so you have to move your head in a curve if you want your arrow to stay equally visible. And the edge of a lens is typically the worst spot, optically, especially with cheap lenses, so cutting off the edge lets you work with the better part of the lens. If you're using a glass lens, it's probably not worth the trouble to cut it (or grind it) down, but if you're using a plastic lens, it probably is.

Why not cut the lens in half and get two finders out of it? Good question. To answer it, we need to understand what happens to the arrow when you look at it through a lens.  Look at the diagram below. The focal point is out there in front of the center of the lens, but the light rays coming from the lens to your eye are parallel. That means no matter what part of a lens you look through, an object at the focal point (the arrow) looks like it's straight out in front of that part of the lens. You can move your head way off to the side and it looks like the arrow moves with your eye until it moves completely outside the lens. Go ahead and play with a lens and demonstrate this to yourself.




So think about how this works in practice. If you're looking through half a lens at an arrow placed at the lens's focal point, you'll see it in focus and in its real position in space. Raise your head and the arrow will appear over the top of the half-lens, but blurry now because your eye is still focused on infinity.  (First scenario in the diagram below.) So far, so good; that's intuitive and exactly what you'd expect. But think about it for a minute: The arrow doesn't fade out when you raise your head; it just goes from being in focus to being blurry. And it blocks your target.

Now look at what happens if you use the top half of the lens (or a whole lens). This is the middle scenario in the diagram below. If you look through the lens at the arrow, it looks fine until you raise your head far enough for the arrow to slide upward out of the lens. But the arrow doesn't appear out there in space, blurry or otherwise! It just fades away (the split pupil effect). You have to raise your head a long ways (the radius of the lens) to see the actual arrow. That's because the arrow is at the lens's focal point, remember? This works fine for a finder. The only downside is that your finder body tilts quite a bit away from straight on. Why does it do that? Because the tip of the arrow is even with the center of the lens. If you build your finder this way, you should mount the lens upright, not tilted like I've shown it in the drawing below. That will give you less distortion from looking through a tilted lens.

The third scenario below, in which you cut off the top third or so of the lens, represents a good compromise between the two extremes above. You get a nice split-pupil effect, the arrow is far enough below the edge of the lens that it doesn't get in the way of your target, and if you make the arrow only as high as the center of the lens, the finder doesn't have to tilt at all. Plus you get more lens area in which to find your arrow when you're looking for it in the dark. But like I said above, it's only worth doing if your lens is easy to cut or grind down. Otherwise just use the entire lens. If you make your arrow only half as high as the lens, you won't have any tilt to the finder body with a full lens, either.



That's pretty much the finder. Build yourself one! Have fun. Play.

A little history:

This idea isn't new with me. I got it from Craig Daniels, who got it from Chuck Lott, who got it from who knows where. There's a mention of the idea in the "Amateur Scientist" column in the November 1952 Scientific American magazine, in which Albert Ingalls attributes it to Kansas City amateur astronomer Stanley B. Rowson with the accompanying illustration at right. Note that Rowson used the lens wrong-way-up, but he compensated by making his arrow out of two luminous lines that didn't actually meet in the middle, so he could still see his target in the gap when he moved his eye above the lens. Rowson said he got the idea from a military celestial navigation device (probably the Mark 1 or Mark 2 astro-compass), so the idea goes way back.



Best of both worlds:

One of the biggest problems with telescopic finders (the little telescopes used to aim bigger telescopes) is that it's hard to figure out what part of the sky they're aimed at. People try to sight down the mounting bolts, or down the telescope tube itself, to get in the right ballpark, then look through the finder to see if their target might be in the field of view. It usually isn't. A lot of people resort to mounting two finders on their scope: a Telrad or Rigel to get them in the ballpark, then a telescopic finder to star-hop to their target.

Why not put a split-pupil finder right on your telescopic finder body? A little nub of glow-in-the-dark tape down at the far end, a lens on the near end, and Bob's your uncle.

I don' t know why I used the top half of a lens here rather than 2/3 of a lens like I do on my other finders. That's probably what I had on hand at the time. Note that the tip of the arrow is even with the center of the lens, as described above.


Random notes on the split pupil finder:

Red light won't charge glow-in-the-dark tape (you need a wavelength equal to or more energetic than the wavelength the tape emits), so you'll need to flash it with white light at the beginning of your observing session. You can usually cup your hands around the light and arrow and prevent angry outcries from your fellow observers. I've found that my eyes dark-adapt at about the same rate that the glow in the dark material loses its glow, and under a truly dark sky there's usually enough starlight to let me see the arrow even when it has faded completely, so I'm usually good all night with a single charge.

The lens dews up pretty easily, since it's sticking up into space without shielding. So use your fingers to squeegee it off. Seriously! Your fingers won't scratch it unless you're grubbier than you ought to be around your eyepieces, and even so, who cares if you do scratch it? You'll still be able to see the arrow through it just fine, and objects in the sky will be just as easy to see as ever because you're not using the lens to see them.

I got my glow tape from Scopestuff: http://www.scopestuff.com/ss_glot.htm  At 1/8" per arrow, one $10 roll is pretty much a lifetime supply.

Craig (mentioned above) gave me the plastic lenses that I use, so I haven't had to buy any, but Surplus Shed has several of the right diameter and focal length for cheap. There are probably dozens of other places that sell inexpensive lenses of the right focal length. If you find a particularly good source, please let me know and I'll post it here.

How to contact me

email graphicI'd love to hear from people who are interested in this finder design. Please feel free to email me at the address on the right. (Sorry you can't click on it or copy and paste it; it's a graphic file to thwart spambots that search the internet for addresses to send junk mail to.) I have no idea how much mail this idea will generate, so I can't guarantee a response, but I'll do my best to answer everyone who writes with a genuine question or comment about the design.