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alexbb

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Posts posted by alexbb

  1. On 03/08/2019 at 11:56, maw lod qan said:

    Wonderful image. 

    I have to say I do enjoy seeing all the M/W images that are posted on the forum. When I was young, our skies would have had to been classified as a bortle 1. Memories of the Milkyway still stand out in my grey matter.

    Thank you! Bortle 1 is something I have to try once.

    I updated the original image with a higher resolution one.

  2. I remembered that I had this data unprocessed too so I gave it a try.

    The dynamic range is huge on this one, from the darkest areas in the galaxy to the brightest. To bring up selectively some regions I'd need to make some uneven masks which is not really my style. So the image is a bit flat compared to others, but I tried to display it more "naturally" if that's allowed to be said.

    For this image I used data from multiple sessions as follows:

    Canon 550D + Canon 50mm F/1.8 @F/2.8; Canon 6D + 70-200mm F/4 L @70mm wide open; - 3 panels with each setup, 21-27 min each panel with each camera

    Canon 550D + Carl Zeiss Jena 135mm F/3.5 wide open; 2 panels covering the galaxy region, 15min exposure for each panel; 4 panels covering the Rho Ophiuchi area, 15-51min exposure/panel

    Canon 6D + Canon 70-200 F/4 L @200mm wide open; 4 panels covering the Rho Ophiuchi area, same as above.

    And here's the picture:

    Galaxy_RGB_all5_066_scnr.thumb.jpg.3b1bd8ae0cf02c2e8137314b14fe0d8b.jpg

     

    Clear skies!

    Alex

    • Like 10
  3. Unfortunately I failed to plan and a roof was right in the Moon's apparent path so I had to pull the mount a few steps back during the first part of the umbra.

    The other part went well and earlier during the evening I shot a plane transit too.

    Still a bit disappointing for me for not being careful enough.

    IMG_8914_aligned_pipp.gif.c3e21ab14edf4769e1f85d8bf81e27e0.gif

    IMG_8887_crop.JPG

     

    And in case the animation doesn't load:

     

    • Like 8
  4. I've been recording data for a long while on this one.

    I restarted this year with the 200p, but in the final image I also included data shot last year with the 130PDS.

    I have now in total 7h of Ha and 8h of OIII from last year + 12.5h of Ha and 13.5h of OIII from this year + 2h of each LRGB from the past week.

    The 130PDS was carried on top of the AZ-EQ5 last year and this year the EQ6-R carried the 200p. Poor tracking last year, but a bit of deconvolution helped and the poorer data went in in a very small ratio. The EQ6-R guided at 0.6"-0.8" RMS all the time. Perhaps not really enough for a desired 1"/px scale, but deconvolution helped here too.

    Until now, it seems that the Astronomik OIII filter reflects much less than the old Optolong OIII filter.

    The camera used was the ASI1600MMC and guiding was done through OAG.

    Before calling the image final, what are your thoughts on improvement?

    image.thumb.png.a40de222a2d4b75243d6756d37e53880.png

     

    Thank you and clear skies!

    Alex

    • Like 37
    • Thanks 5
  5. 8 hours ago, SAW said:

    Am I going to need a reducer or flattener if so which one and what's the back distance needed and where is it measured from ? 

    I found both the non reducing OVL flattener and the SkyWatcher 0.85x reducing flattener needing a bit more than 55mm back distance. I was limited by focus in-travel limit to ~60mm back distance (from the end thread) with both and decent results. The ASI183MC's sensor is smaller than a Canon crop sensor, but also the pixels are smaller so the defects will appear emphasized.

    I heard that the TS 0.79x reducing flattener is better suited for this scope. Search the forums for info about this one.

    • Thanks 1
  6. On 04/09/2018 at 14:21, alexbb said:

    Seems TS or Astroshop have a few USB dew heaters https://www.teleskop-express.de/shop/product_info.php/info/p8576_AST-Optics-USB-Heating-Collar--40-cm-length.html

    I will order one together with a Celestron Powertank Pro when they become available and let you know how it performs. It seems that in US the Celestron Powertank Pro is available already so it should be in EU soon too.

    I received one Saturday and I had a chance of testing it. No dew on an unprotected Canon 50 1.8 STM. A half charged 10000 mAh powerbank went flat in ~3 hours though, the heater felt quite warm at hand.

  7. 14 hours ago, carastro said:

    Excellent certainly knocks spots off mine.  What length were your subs and what mount were you using? 

    Carole 

    Thank you, Cara! Skies were decent, though far from the best I had in that area other times. Usually it's a Bortle 2 there, but now there was something lurking in the air, you can see some weird gradients to the right, perhaps some passing cloud not visible in a single frame. Still a Bortle 3 maybe.

    I exposed for 3 minutes with each camera. 2 x (9 subs for one panel with a bit of moon and 7 subs for both other 2 panels, without moon). I put them on the AZ-EQ5 and dithered every frame.

    Alex

  8. Thank you all, appreciated! Maybe some sunglasses are required for a better view :D

    14 minutes ago, ollypenrice said:

    Beautiful. I've never tried HOO, only ever Ha added to red and OIII to green and blue in an LRGB image. Your image has a nicely gaseous look. My approach tends to make it look rather solid.

    Olly

    Why don't you give it a try? If you didn't have OIII data, you certainly have now

    • Thanks 1
  9. With the summer coming, it seems that clouds will go away for a while too.

    I was able to resume data acquisition for the M27. I have now ~6h of Ha and ~7.5h of OIII, shot with the ASI1600 through the 200/1200 newtonian.

    The plan is to gather in total ~12h of Ha, ~12h of OIII and ~3h for each LRGB, maybe some iR too.

    I'm making the data I have so far available for you too, maybe you want to have a play and I'm also curious of your processing outcomes.

    I have 7h of Ha and 8h of OIII shot last year with the 130PDS and the above mentioned. You'll figure out which is which. I only ran a DBE on them.

    Here's my first version:

    M27_200p_p01.thumb.jpg.1eb6fce0819388a58fbea8d507763ab9.jpg

    Clear skies to you too!

    Alex

    M27-F588-2018-04-22-O3-480min-stackAPP_DBE_crop.fits M27-F588-2018-05-12-Ha-all-420min-integration2_DBE_crop.fits Ha-200p-22200s_DBE_crop.fits OIII-200p-27000s_DBE_crop.fits

    • Like 14
  10. 27 minutes ago, AbsolutelyN said:

    Absolutely stunning image Alex. Is the 6d is modded in any way? As old as the 6d is I'm half tempted to pick one up for travel as seems more HA sensitive than my Sony a7r3.

    Thank you! I used an unmodded camera, but really good skies help a lot. There's a lot of dust in Orion though, not only Ha.

    The last version with ~double the exposure time is this one:

    qqZmrGYp-ijx_1824x0_7jdKXpJH.jpg

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  11. 37 minutes ago, vlaiv said:

    That is not for Riccardi reducer is it? I see TSFLAT2.5 mentioned in text and that is TS flattener without reduction factor. This one:

    https://www.teleskop-express.de/shop/product_info.php/info/p2646_TS-Optics-REFRACTOR-1-0x-Flattener-for-full-sized-sensors---M68-connection.html

    I would be very surprised if they found astigmatism in Riccardi reducer.

    Back on original topic, I think this text will be more helpful as it discusses exact combination of scope / FF/FR:

    http://photonenfangen.de/instruments/skywatcher-esprit-100-ed/

    Yes, you're right, the flattener was the TS one without reduction. Since I read the article I always erroneously assumed that it was the reducing one. I even considered the combo myself. Thanks for spotting!

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