🇬🇧 Herschel prism

How it Works

A Herschel wedge, also called a Herschel prism, is a special filter for observing the sun. It has many advantages over a lens filter, but can only be used with refracting telescopes.

In conjunction with a telescope, a Herschel wedge provides detailed images of the sun's photosphere. Sunspots, faculae, and granulation can be observed and photographed. The Herschel wedge should not be used with reflecting telescopes, as the secondary mirror could overheat and be damaged.

At approximately 4%, the light intensity reaching the eyepiece is still too strong for visual observation of the sun to avoid eye damage. Therefore, the remaining amount must be reduced using a neutral density (ND) filter with a density of 3.0. In combination with a polarizing filter, the amount of light can be continuously adjusted. For photography, lower density neutral density filters can be used to keep the exposure time short.

(Source: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herschelkeil / License "Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike")

image.png

  1. Glass body of the Herschel wedge
  2. Neutral density filter
  3. Eyepiece
  4. Polarizing filter

Image Source: By Tamasflex - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=15738848

Usage Instructions

Caution is always necessary when observing the sun. Burns and injuries can happen quite easily. This is especially true with Herschel prisms, because the telescope does not carry a lens filter when using them.

Because sunlight enters the telescope unimpeded, we only recommend Herschel prisms:

Precautions/Safety Instructions

When photographing through a Herschel prism, the image may appear too bright, even if the polarizing filter is set to maximum attenuation. In this case, you will need another filter between the Herschel prism and the camera.

Applications

You can use a Herschel prism very effectively with a binocular viewer. Binocular vision makes many details on the sun much clearer.

Color filters can increase contrast. Try red or green filters.

For photography, you can connect a camera directly. For focal photography, a planetary camera and the "lucky imaging" method are recommended. Digital SLR cameras can also be used, but focusing can easily fail with them, as the focuser on many refractors cannot be retracted far enough. In such cases photography using eyepiece projection is usually possible.




Revision #4
Created 2026-03-27 07:02:15 UTC by BM
Updated 2026-05-04 14:31:06 UTC by Product Management