"Full Spectrum" Light Panels

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Fri, 06/11/2021 - 23:22

I few years ago I asked Ed Sinofsky of PhotoGlow (photoglow.com) to make me a panel similar to Spike-a-Flat but with a spectrum that included at least part of the near-IR so that I could make all my flats from B to Ic easily. I was very pleased with the results, even lighting, remotely controlled with a Spike-a-Flat controller resulting in what IMO are really good flats.

I could not advertise this neat new B-to-Ic flat panel. Ed made it as an experiment and due to his ongoing obligations to Spike-a-Flat he could not offer such panels for general sale. That obligation has ended and Ed has signaled that he is willing to make panels up to 30"x30". I ordered an 18'x18". I am not sure how the pricing would be structured, but if anyone is interested I think Ed would be happy to make one for you. I have some spectra and light distribution pictures of my panel and would be glad to forward that information, although I suspect Ed would do the same.

My panel:  white light LEDs on 2 sides and 850 nm LEDs on the other 2 sides. In essence a spike-a-flat on Ic steroids. I wonder about a flat panel with an array of LEDs each centered on a Johnson-Cousins filter spectrum peak.

Ed Wiley (the other Ed)

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
"Full Spectrum" Light Panels

Hello! Are these LED panels or are they electroluminescence? From your comments, I presumed the former.

    It sounds like you've found the Ic coverage to be good. When I looked at IR LEDs, the spectrum always seemed to high and the width to narrow in order to get good coverage at Ic = 806 nm for photometry.

    I would be interested in seeing the spectra and light distribution flats you've obtained. Best regards.

Mike

 

 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Light Panel

Mike, 

Description of my panel from Ed Sinofsky: It has white light LEDs on 2 sides and 850 nm LEDs on the other 2 sides. This unit for Ed [me] is 18” x 18”

I can't seem to upload the pictures Ed sent me, so I suggest that you contact him directly or me off-forum. The white light LEDs show the usual dip at about 475nm that seems to be typical of white LEDs, so the spectral coverage is not uniform. I suspect that could be improved with addition of other LEDs but it seems "good enough" at the amateur level for now. The 850nm spectrum appears broad with a peak at around 840 nm. The Y-axis is in intensity units (max 10) and ranges from 4 at 800 and 865nm with a more-or-less normal distribution that is not peaky (intensity level =7 at 820 and 852nm). If you consider the intensity scale, at 805 nm it scores 5/10 and going up towards the peak that is at around 835nm. I was especially pleased with the results in Ic. And my original motivation in having that first panel made by Ed S was my frustration in trying to extract a decent Ic flat out of an EL panel and my desire to avoid twilight flats.

I suspect one can do much more with LED panels, I consider mine to be first generation + Ic coverage. I am now between rigs, having taken down my Edge and in the process of installing another rig. I do have flats I can share from my old rig, we can discuss that off-forum.

Ed Wiley