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johnfosteruk

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Everything posted by johnfosteruk

  1. A very appealing scene this evening. Oh, and a handful of stars in Cetus. One frame, shot at 150mm with the Tamron 150-600 on a Nikon D7100. 1s exposure, F5, ISO 1000. Just a little fettling in photoshop to adjust contrast.
  2. He didn't kick start anything for me, but It was his purchase, and subsequent review of the Lacerta Herschel wedge that led me to purchase the same and start taking the solar business more seriously. There must be so many SGL members with a similar debt of gratitude.
  3. Very sad news indeed. John was an influential and knowledgable member of SGL. As others have said I did wonder why he'd not posted for some time. RIP John.
  4. Funny you should say that, I was going to mention the 135mm M42 SMC Super Takumar F3.5. It can be adjusted to focus to infinity, fairly easily and is a good little performer for astro. A lot cheaper than a Nikon too.
  5. I was going to say it depends on whether you want something long or something wide. Which is why I'm now possibly going to second the 16-300 suggestion as it covers both ends. Never used it myself tho so can't speak for IQ, AF speed etc although DPReview say good things, although they say corner sharpness and AF reliability suffers at the long end (worth looking at other reviews though as that may not be the case on every unit). They also say there's CA and distortion in spades but Photoshop etc can sort that if you have it. If you're wanting it for Astro work though, all of that will cause you problems.
  6. That's nice. I downloaded the Stephan's Quintet data last night - nice big files aren't they. I'll be having a play with them tonight.
  7. Been waiting for this, cheers Dave.
  8. You can still register - just use N/A for those fields.
  9. Here's a lot more detail on the NIRCam filters: https://jwst-docs.stsci.edu/jwst-near-infrared-camera/nircam-instrumentation/nircam-filters
  10. As others have said, just in this release there's so much to enjoy. Looking forward to regular releases. And don't forget you can access the data yourself via MAST, as described here: https://archive.stsci.edu/contents/newsletters/july-2022/accessing-jwst-science-data-after-the-end-of-commissioning?filterPage=news&filterName=news-filter
  11. Yes, me too, it'll be great to see some of that stuff confirmed, and new things too.
  12. Very nice, here's a rough approximation of the strut/secondary layout someone 'knocked up' and resultant Fourier transform that I found 6 years ago just for interest. Not far off the final result.
  13. Let's not forget another area Webb will be contributing to - exoplanets.
  14. Hi, my name's John and it's been approximately 3 years since I handled a Herschel wedge. I've had the occasional visual session with Baader film but I thought that what with Sol perking up a bit, it was about time I fired up the imaging setup. My intent was to do it first thing but other tasks required my time and I didn't get to it until just after 17:00 so the seeing wasn't good. Nonetheless I managed to wrestle some detail out of a stack of the best 25 frames out of 100. It took a bit of selective processing in PS and rescaling to approx 25% of the original image scale tho. This current group is quite the spectacle isn't it. Usual process - Pipp>Autostakkert>IMPPG>Repeat with different settings several times, and blend the best bits with some masks and a bit of additional sharpening/contrast & levels adjustment in PS. It appears I need to capture some flats as well. This feels like a good start to getting back on the solar imaging horse again, I'll see if I can add in a barlow next time and I may even start looking at Ha options soon. Mono RGB
  15. Stunning image Avani.
  16. Cracking crescent wasn't it. Grabbed a few snaps. Then some doubles in Orion, starting with the Trapezium, good seeing gave up A-D easily.
  17. Definitely a little, marginal gains and all that, every little helps.
  18. Nice image. Lovely depth to it, makes you want to fly through NGC 1893.
  19. I setup the Skymax last night at about 20:30 and ended up not observing a single thing with it. My neighbour and our daughter popped out and we spent about an hour setting the world to rights, then it was dinner time. That crescent moon, with the earthshine was stunning with the naked eye tho.
  20. Fine images. You can't beat a Herschel wedge I say, unless your intent is to keep the setup cheap
  21. Lovely image. I quite like the hue but if you really wanted to neutralise it you could use the eyedropper tool (assuming GIMP works the same as PS) to read the RGB values on the background sky, then adjust your RGB levels accordingly to balance it all up.
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