The Baader Solar Continuum filter is designed to enhance the visibility of solar granulation and sunspot details. By transmitting a specific spectral region around 540nm, free of emission and absorption lines, the Solar Continuum filter is able to boost contrast and reduce the effects of atmospheric turbulence. With the Solar Continuum filter in place, images snap to focus, and granulation becomes regularly visible. Details at the limit of visibility become easier to hold, and image motion reduced. The Solar Continuum filter works well in all types of telescopes, for both visual and imaging. Users of SCTs and achromatic refractors will find it particularly beneficial, as it completely excludes the red and blue wavelengths, and centers on the peak visual wavelengths where the telescope optics are sharpest and free from chromatic aberrations. For digital imaging, we also recommend the Continuum filter be combined with the UV-IR Cut filter (to completely cut the defocused far infrared wavelengths).
Important: The Solar Continuum Filter MUST only be used in conjunction with the recommended SOLAR FILTER for your telescope. Failure to do so will result in serious eye damage or blindness.
Solar filters comparison
Baader Planetarium Solar Continuum Filter - 1.25"
This Baader Planetarium Solar Continuum Filter comes in a fully-threaded 1.25" round cell.
Works in conjunction with a primary white light solar filter (or Herschel Wedge Prism) to show more granulation and sunspot detail!
The Baader Planetarium Solar Continuum Filter boosts contrast, cuts down on atmospheric disturbances but transmits at 540nm.
Good for both visual work as well as imaging, and even makes a good star test filter.
The Baader Planetarium Solar Continuum Filter cannot be used alone when looking at the Sun, or eye damage and equipment damage will occur. Must be used in conjunction with primary solar filter.
Sunspots 11461, 11460 (right) and 11459 captured with a 80mm f6 refractor and Vesta pro webcam. Solar filter + Green filter + Baader contrast filter + IR-cut filter.
Use on telescopes 8" aperture and larger to reject blue- and red-toned structures on the surface of Jupiter and thereby increase their contrast relative to lighter parts of the disc. Also use for the enhancement of Saturn
A green light source typically has a spectral power distribution dominated by energy with a wavelength of roughly 487-570 nm. Green is complementary to a purplish red or reddish purple colour, in both additive and subtractive mixtures, and in simultaneous contrast effects and afterimages. The sensitivity of the dark-adapted human eye is greatest at about 507 nm, a bluish-green colour, while the light-adapted eye is most sensitive about 555 nm, a yellowish-green colour. Read more
The Celtic languages had a term for "blue/green/grey", Proto-Celtic glasto-, which gave rise to Old Irish glas "green, grey" and to Welsh glas "blue".
A #58 Green filter (24% transmission) rejects red and blue wavelengths. The filter is usually used to increase contrast on Venus, or the Martian polar ice caps; but it does a reasonable job of increasing contrast on nebulae. The filter, centred around the 530 nanometres spectral region, includes the two doubly ionised oxygen lines (496 and 501nm) and the hydrogen-beta line (486nm) which are emitted by planetary and most emission nebulae.