Camera with only hundreds kilopixels resolution can be more
suitable for telescope guiding than bigger camera with high resolution
and big detector. Guiding images are typically evaluated only in a
small fraction of the whole field containing selected star, so the
bigger CCD may be useless. But if the camera is used as imaging device
on microscope or short focal length telescope, larger CCD detector is
always better.
The G1-2000 camera is mechanically identical to other cameras of
the same series, but it offers resolution 1600 × 1200 pixels. Single pixel measures
4.4 m, which
is the smallest pixel of the whole G1 series (model G1-0800 with
resolution 1024 × 768 pixels has pixels
measuring 4.65 m). CCD detector diagonal dimension is
9 mm (marked 1/2"), which is the biggest
detector offered in the G1 cameras (other G1 cameras employ CCD
detectors measuring 6 mm in diagonal,
marked 1/3").

The G1-2000 CCD camera (right) offers larger CCD detector
compared to other G1 series cameras (left)
The G1-2000 cameras are offered in monochrome version as well as
with color CCD detector (model G1-2000C). Color CCD chip uses
so-called Bayer mask—individual pixels are
covered with red, green and blue filters. It is possible to
reconstruct color image from single shot with proper software. These
procedures are thoroughly described in the G1 camera documentation and
in the SIMS software user's guide.
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