The field of view describes the size of the image section that can be seen through the optics. This is specified either in meters (width) at a distance of 1000 meters (m/1000m), or feet (width) at a distance of 1000 yards (ft/1000 yds), or as an angle (degrees). The higher the magnification, the smaller the field of view.
Binoculars have a large field of view, which means you can see a wide area. Spotting scopes have a higher magnification, which makes the field of view much smaller, but you can see more detail.
Color: Green
Magnification: 10x
Effective objective lens diameter: 25 mm
Exit pupil diameter: 2.5 mm
Exit pupil distance: 17 mm
Field of view at m/1,000 m / ft/1,000 yds: 98 m/1000m
Field of view degrees: 5.6 °
Field of view with eye glasses (°): 5.6 °
Field of view apparent: 53 °
Shortest focusing distance: 2.5 m
Diopter adjustment: ± 5 dpt
Diopter correction at ∞: 8 dpt
Light transmission: 88 %
Pupil distance: 50-74 mm
Twilight factor acc. to ISO 14132-1: 15.8
Length in mm.: 110 mm
Height in mm.: 46 mm
Weight: 350 g
Functional temperature: -25 to +55 °C
Storage temperature: -30 to +70 °C
Submersion tightness: 13 ft / 4 m water depth (inert gas filling)