Seeing describes how steady the atmosphere is. Turbulent air cells at different temperatures bend and distort starlight on its way to your eye or camera, causing stars to twinkle and planetary detail to blur. Astronomers call this astronomical seeing.
- Good seeing — Stars appear as steady, sharp points. Planetary detail is crisp and stable. Diffraction rings in the telescope are clean and concentric. High magnification works well.
- Bad seeing — Stars shimmer, boil, or dance around. Planetary discs look like they're viewed through running water. Diffraction patterns break apart. High magnification makes things worse.
- Causes — Jet streams at high altitude, temperature differences between ground and air (especially over concrete, rooftops, or recently heated surfaces), wind at the observer's level, and convective cells in the upper atmosphere.
Twinkling is a bug, not a feature
The romantic scintillation of stars is literally the atmosphere throwing off your retina. A star at the top of the atmosphere isn't twinkling — it's a perfect point source. Every flicker you see is a tiny shift in the air's refractive index between you and that photon.