The O-III filter is designed for observing and photographing those gas nebulae in which doubly ionized oxygen fluoresces - i.e. primarily for planetary nebulae and supernova remnants. With a FWHM of only 9 nm and equipped with the CMOS-optimised coating technology, it darkens the sky background and thus also blocks stray light much better than its 10 nm predecessor ( Baader O-III Filter (10nm) visual (various versions available) ). However, the narrower FWHM is not the most important improvement. More important is the significantly better blocking aside of the O III wavelength, as well as even steeper transmission slopes and a broad plateau in the transmission range. With a transmission of 97% for the emission line at 500.7 nm, practically all the light of the nebula passes through the filter. At the same time, this filter can be used photographically for practically any focal ratio from f/1.8 to f/12 without passing any light of the H-beta line. This makes the Super-G filter just as ideal for use in areas with high light pollution.
The 9 nm O-III filter can be excellently used photographically on all telescopes, especially with a DSLR or an astronomical OSC color camera. It offers all the advantages of the CMOS-optimised Baader filters such as Reflex-Blocker™ coating against reflections, plano-optical polishing, and age-resistant Life-Coat™ coating. For monochrome cameras, we recommend the even stronger Narrowband (6,5 nm) and Ultra-Narrowband (4 nm) filters, which are available specially adapted for different aperture ratios. For this comparatively broadband 9 nm filter, preshifting is not necessary at focal ratios faster than f/4, thus it can be used at all focal ratios.
The filter has the same thickness as the 1.25"/2" Baader LRGB filters. This makes it suitable for use as a "super G filter": In the transmission range of the normal green filter (490-580nm) there are no emission lines other than OIII; H-Beta at 486 nm is already covered by the RGB blue filter. So, when using the 9 nm O-III filter instead of the standard RGB green filter, emission nebulae are consequently emphasized much more strongly, while the stars appear fainter.