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Seti Astro

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    https://www.setiastro.com/

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    Math, Astrophotography, Computing, Physics
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    New Orleans, LA

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  1. Thanks for watching! Hope the script helps out too! TBH I didn't know how the community would even react to any of my videos. I was expecting a lot of people just saying "you're doing it all wrong!" hahaha! Glad it is helping!! I think I got my digital signatures for my repository all squared away with this latest CPD update from PixInsight as well! This should take care of not having to say "yes install anyways" and should ensure the script will be available in the future with the next core updates to PixInsight.
  2. Well started the process to get digitally signed. Submitted my keys to PixInsight and waiting on them now. This does seem like a double edged sword. It will definitely hinder us non-coders with even more stuff to learn limiting creativity in the community to a handful that are willing to jump through all the hoops. At the same time it does heighten the security of the PixInsight platform. I'm glad I was able to get it figured out so far!!
  3. Hey everyone! I made my first 2 scripts in PixInsight and am pretty excited to share the NB to RGB Stars Combination Script. I am not a coder and knew this would be a bit of a steep curve, but finally sat down and created a script to take your NB stars only images and combine them into a beautiful RGB stars image. The script is really intuitive. You add your linear Ha stars image, OIII stars image, and optionally SII stars image. There is also an option to give the image a Star Stretch exactly like my first Star Stretch script. Never waste those precious hours under the night sky getting RGB stars data and spend every second getting that NB data!! Link to videos about the scripts: https://youtu.be/EZKAF7ItJYA https://youtu.be/8_Jswk_wE0A Repository Link to add in PixInsight: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/setiastro/pixinsight-updates/main/ Link to my site to get the scripts manually: https://www.setiastro.com/pjsr-scripts Leave any comments or suggestions!
  4. Hey everyone. I just want to say I made my first script in PixInsight! I had a number of people ask me a good method of stretching their linear stars into a great non-linear state to use to screen them back in. I figured this would be a good problem to tackle for my first script. You select your linear color stars image from the dropdown. You can leave the sliders at default and hit execute. It'll run its magic and you'll have perfectly stretched stars ready for screening! I have a video and a short about it if you want to see. Link to download the script: https://www.setiastr...sr-scripts It will be in a zip folder. Just extract it and go in pixinsight to Scripts -> Feature Scripts to install it. Once installed it will be under Scripts -> Utilities -> Star Stretch Video https://youtu.be/8_Jswk_wE0A Video short with update about version 2 https://youtube.com/...U?feature=share Comments or questions welcome!
  5. Combining over 13hrs of RGB and 28hrs of SHO narrowband to reveal the galactic maelstrom in the heart of M101 The Pinwheel Galaxy. I struggled with how I wanted to present the data and settled on an RGB-Continuum Subtracted HSO Foraxx Palette, I am presenting the full RGBHSO version and just the HSO foraxx versions. I kept the stars in both and I thought it added to the images. What I find really surprising are the structures not only in M101 but in NGC5474, NGC5477, and NGC5486. There are some HII regions designated in the SRM2012 catalog, especially for NGC5474, but the others really haven't been studied much. The other very cool item is NGC5471. There is really nice structure in all 3 narrowband channels and Hubble actually did some observing on it as well. Link to Astrobin: https://astrob.in/336nmk/0/ Video I made on this capture: https://youtu.be/OyvWC2F5hyw Comments appreciated! All this data screams for some interaction, so please check out the interactive slider I made for this image too (should work on desktop and mobile)! https://www.setiastro.com/m101slider https://www.setiastro.com/galaxies https://www.setiastro.com/m101slider NGC5474 NGC5477 NGC5486 NGC5471
  6. Ran across this object (2MASS J09572091+6847393) which showed up on my OIII continuum subtracted data, not in my Ha subtracted data, and since it had this greenish color I assumed it was a small PN. Link to main image: https://astrob.in/kf7vjp/0/ When I looked it up it is listed as a Near IR source in the 2MASS catalogue of point sources. I was not able to find any other information on it. Anyone have any ideas on how to proceed further? Even the Simbad image of it has the same OIII greenish cast that my image has. GIF Ha Continuum Subtracted OIII Continuum Subtracted RGB_HOO Combined SIMBAD Reference
  7. I was intrigued after seeing images of the "cap" on M82 and wanted to take a deep look (40hrs) at the M81/M82 region in both Ha and OIII. There is a lot of structure around these galaxies and a large arc extending below NGC3077 that I have never seen before. There is also the very intriguing Ho IX 9&10 hydrogen structures just below M81. In M82 you can see the hydrogen reaching up to the cap although I have read some controversy if that is coincidence or if it is truly part of the starburst outflow. In the large loop extending below NGC3077 there is listed [CVL2009] Garland-3 identified as the brighter bead on the right of the loop. If anyone has more information on this structure that would be very interesting to read about! There is a ton of cataloged items in M81 to explore more fully. For the continuum subtracted gas images I used a Foraxx palette to combine them. I did find a great paper on Ho IX 9&10: https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/pdf/2005/01/aa1200.pdf Video I made on my image https://youtu.be/xE-BmVQXg78 Link to Astrobin: https://astrob.in/kf7vjp/0/ Comments appreciated! M82 NGC3077
  8. I also have a couple videos on Continuum Subtraction if it helps anyone. Advanced Galaxy Processing Workflow: https://youtu.be/L_P5Cr6B_ww Easy Button for Continuum Subtraction: https://youtu.be/4xTknArd8AY
  9. Using 48x900" each for Ha and OIII to enhance the RGB you can really see the tempest in the core of M106 and the giant streamer coming out of the galaxy. There is a lot of deformation as well from past interations. The narrowband data added greatly to many of the surrounding and background galaxies too. Looking through the annotations I decided to look up all the redshifts of the quasars present in my image. (I have included the redshift and comoving radial distance in the annotated version). By far the farthest object I have seen in any if my images Quasar SDSS J121451.31+471748.9 has a redshift z=3.176 and a comoving radial distance at a staggering 21.7 Billion Lightyears!! The light from that object is over 11 Billion years old! Comments appreciated! Link to Astrobin: https://astrob.in/ri2is3/0/ Video I made on this image: https://youtu.be/uG5LFI5xm20 Close in of the Narrowband Continuum Subtracted Core, really showing the tempest of gas! NGC4220 and 4218. NGC4218 had some very cool narrowband in it NGC4231 and 4232 NGC4217 Quasar SDSS J121451.31+471748.9, heavily stretched so be visible at a distance of 21.7 Billion Lightyears!!
  10. Thanks! If I were to realocate my time I would not have spent it on SII. It is sooo incredibly weak. So that is my only recommendation, skip that channel!
  11. Abell 31 (SH2-290), what I am calling The Moon Jelly Nebula, is a very dim Planetary Nebula in Cancer. Even with 32hrs of integration time it was a lot of effort to pull it out nicely from the background. Ha was the strongest, and the core full of OIII was well visible. SII on the other hand was almost nonexistent! Abell31 is described as "ancient" but didn't find more on the age and lies around 2000 lightyears away. It being so old is why it is sooo dim as all the gases are dispersing and very far from the central white dwarf now greatly reducing the gasses ionization. In the surrounding starfield there is a handful galaxies and a lot of the discovered by GAIA and are very dim and faint. There is no distance data to any of the GAIA galaxies I could find either. The other interesting item is a very close double star HD76037A&B, they are just shy of 300 lightyears away and only 9 arcsec apart. Although I couldn't find if they are true binaries or not, their parallax would suggest they probably are: 10.9939 and 11.0133 milli-arcsecs which is 296.01lyrs and 296.5lyrs away. Link to Astrobin: https://astrob.in/8ktleh/0/ Link to a video I made on this image: https://youtu.be/wxrax_QcQS4 Comments always appreciated! Moon Jelly VS Ha Channel HD76037A&B GAIA Galaxies
  12. Thanks Olly! I do have a C8 for a little more reach, but don't want to change OTAs over while still working on nebula. I was happy with this little object in my refractor for sure.
  13. Finally a clear night when I could finish getting data for this image! NGC2346 in Foraxx HOO palette. Not a whole lot of amateur images of this one. It is quit small and had to push drizzling and plenty of strong dithering to bring out as much detail as I could. Effective f/ ratio of f/12 at this resolution on my 120ST. I did take deep long exposures of the broader area and there really isn't much at all surrounding this nebula. I did an annotated zoomed out version even highlighting various types of stars and galaxies and only 2 galaxies and a handful of variable, red branch, and carbon stars. Really nothing else! The other thing I find just absolutely surprising is this was created by a dance of two stars. They orbit so tightly their period is only 16days and is only split by spectroscopy. When one went into a red giant phase the other star just plowed through the outer layers of it shredding it apart and flinging it into these two lobes you see. Link to Astrobin: https://astrob.in/2f779j/0/ Link to video I made for this image: https://youtu.be/OnoFk9Hez9Q Comments appreciated! Close in crop:
  14. Data taken last August, but was never satisfied on the processing. 6 months later and the weather is nothing but cloudy nights so revisited this with more that I have learned in the last 6 months of processing. Be sure to check out the full image as it is a 200 megapixel image! In the larger mosaic you can see these aren't two different structure but just part of a larger giant bubble of activity including lot' of faint emissions in the whole image. The bok globules and thin streamers coming off the Cygnus wall and the columns and Herbig-Haro objects in the Pelican are just amazing. There is just a ton of dark "smoke" creating thin wisps forming the dark lane structure with hydrogen emissions peaking through. Just so much going on in this region. There are even white dwarfs sprinkled throughout the 116,000 stars in the image!! No wonder it is so heavily imaged by everyone! Video I made on this image: https://youtu.be/VJvMOGnMdwU Link to Astrobin: https://astrob.in/ijlycz/F/ Comments really appreciated! Some close in crops: Pelican Cygnus Wall Cobwebs of dust: Smoke lanes: A very dim cloud in the lower right (I adjusted some curves in the crop to bring it out more)
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