In practice, scattered light elimination amounts to performing three tasks wherever possible throughout the optical train:
- Darken all lens edges with a black Sharpie pen (or equivalent).
- Paint all structural surfaces (tubes, etc.) with Krylon ultra-flat black. Note that the paint will outgas for a couple of days, so it's best to leave painted surfaces away from valuable optics while the paint cures.
- Cover critical surfaces with skid-guard (which is an anti-slip mineral abrasive with an adhesive backing — commonly used for skid-guarding steps). Be sure to paint the skid-guard with ultra-flat black paint, then let it cure for a day or two, before applying it to telescope tubes and parts.
Here are a few photos of the kinds of places that needed fixing in my optical components (click on the thumbnails for larger views):
Skid-guard applied to the interior of the telescope dew shield.
Here you can see skid-guard applied to the inside of the telescope tube. The
un-skid-guarded surfaces have all been painted ultra-flat black. Also, though
it is hard to see in this photo, the achromat objective lens edges have been
colored black with a Sharpie pen.
This is a 1.25 inch to C adapter for attaching my video camera. Note that the
skid-guard has been applied to the inner lip, which was a terribly good
reflector of scattered light.
Here is the other end of the 1.25-inch to C adapter.
Here is the view in one end of the 2-inch
Herschel
wedge. All interior surfaces have been covered with skid-guard. This required
careful disassembly and reassembly of the wedge housing.
This is a view through the other end of the Herschel wedge.
This is an interior shot of the TeleVue 2× barlow. Note the skid-guard. The
interior of this tube was another distressingly efficient reflector of light.
This is a shot of the TeleVue 4× PowerMate. After blackening the lens edges, I
found it necessary to replace the very reflective retaining ring with a baffle made
of skid-guard material.
Application of anti-scattering techniques were unsuccessful on this highly-sensitive
night-vision component.
This over-exposed view shows the remaining scattered light in a train consisting of
Herschel wedge, 2× barlow, 4× PowerMate, and 1.25-inch to C adapter (see
next photo). The scattered light sources are labeled. Despite appearances, this is actually
very, very good; there is only a tiny fraction of the original amount of scattered
light.
This is an outside view of the optical train used in the above photo. This is
my current setup for high-resolution white-light solar observing.