-
Posts
1,129 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Events
Blogs
Everything posted by geeklee
-
Struggling with background extraction
geeklee replied to Ivor's topic in Imaging - Image Processing, Help and Techniques
Thanks for posting this Robin, I'll definitely try this approach next time. -
HI @Mandy D I believe its the "Sharpened" setting. Apologies if you've always used this without issue. I've always found it too much and prefer to take the stack from AS!3 and run deconvolution etc elsewhere. Can always deselect to easily test if it's not giving expected results this time
-
Thanks Jim. Even reading that answer I'm not convinced - I don't know why! I'll have a rethink when I'm next out with the gear.
-
Great shot Wim, the Ha additions look fantastic and help identify the fainter arms even more clearly in NGC 7640. Super colour in both galaxies.
-
Best filter for imaging narrowband with the ASI 552MM Pro.
geeklee replied to wavydavy's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
As well as the more expensive brands you can also look at narrower band pass options (less than 7nm). These should offer more contrast, subtle going from 7nm to something like 4nm but noticeable (to my eye anyway). Is there a particular issue you're having with the Baader 7nm? I still have fond memories of that filter, even moving on since. -
Definitely. Those of us in lighter skies need to find the right cut off between clear sky/time/results! When you mentioned a guider could be added, I wondered if that might help tighten up the stars a little and any slight elongation (top to bottom to my eye looking in the middle area). I'm terrible for viewing images at full size. Much like the noise that was pretty much invisible looking at the forum size, the stars are also a minor thing. You've done a great job here.
-
@Jim Smith @The Admiral Agreed, I believe its guide camera pixels and it's how I've been using it. I found a few references to this in older posts/release notes but nothing concrete.
-
I think you've captured a great shot with the equipment Stig - nice natural colour with good detail to enjoy in the galaxy itself. Nice balanced background too (a little bit of noise but reading your notes above, that's understandable without any NR) The guide camera should help if the above is unguided - just helping you tidy up those star shapes a little more and let you focus on the next thing (there seems to always be a next thing 🤣)
-
NGC6866: Crescent Nebula - First Image in a While
geeklee replied to The Lazy Astronomer's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
Great result, with the crescent looking clean and detailed alongside the super stars. OIII doesn't look overcooked at all. Well worth the wait to complete that integration time.- 1 reply
-
- 1
-
IC1396 - 46.4 hours Ha/OSC (Elephant Trunk Nebula)
geeklee replied to tooth_dr's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
Interesting idea with the Ha as star luminance 👍. We have some amazing options and approaches for more easily working with stars at the moment. That's one mre off the list from your tower of data that's been accumulating! Great job. -
It sounded like a challenge to bring all the data together (even more impressive) and pulling up an HST image as comparison is always going to give you second thoughts! ☺️
-
Fantastic @tomato Looks really clear, with well defined details and good colour as well.
-
IC1396 - 46.4 hours Ha/OSC (Elephant Trunk Nebula)
geeklee replied to tooth_dr's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
What an integration Adam! You've created a superb set of images. The Trunk looks stunning in mainly (?) RGB, with superb detail - was it tricky to blend the data sets? Thanks for sharing the Ha too - I couldn't find a bit of noise anywhere! Sharp, detailed and full of contrast. -
Nice one @Domain105 thanks for the follow up Yeah, this is a useful mod - mine came with the same. My drawtube protrudes into the tube too but I don't think the star impact is too intrusive. If you wanted to see the single piece secondary spider, I have an image here.
-
Really glad you got a happy outcome @Domain105 As an owner of a 150P-DS, I really enjoyed the write up of the various options and issues. I purchased mine second hand so it had some really useful tweaks done already. I use the 0.9x SW Reducer but on a small sensor. I recently added the solid secondary spider from Backyard Universe - a noticeable upgrade to collimation stability and minor aesthetic improvements. Am I right in saying you now have the Baader ClickLock + SW F4 CC? Does the combination of these mean the draw tube is further out overall, so doesn't protrude into the tube so much?
-
Imaging with the Samyang 135mm f2
geeklee replied to Uranium235's topic in Getting Started With Imaging
Definitely understandable that you want to get basic tests done. Given the moon and weather it's difficult to compare to others. I can't see anything obvious you're doing wrong given the checks you listed. The filters may be parfocal but the Samyang lens is not bringing all wavelengths of light to focus at the same point. Similar perhaps, but as I understand it, it depends how well corrected the scope/lens is. In my image, the red may look "a little off" but it looks noticeably out of focus if I was to shoot my Red/Ha at that focus point. Likewise, if I have focused for Ha, the OIII will be out of focus. I see the symptoms of this when shooting OSC on my Samyang. I'm not sure why this is, sorry. Good idea, trying F4 for focus position although gauging signal gain/loss will be more difficult. My Ha and OIII are at least 100 steps apart I'm sure. I can only suggest to test further where possible and refocus between filters (any filters) and then compare. -
Imaging with the Samyang 135mm f2
geeklee replied to Uranium235's topic in Getting Started With Imaging
Was the moon out during capture? Could the weather still have had some lingering impact? I'd hold off making any permanent decisions until you've had another test or two. Like @Adreneline my Ha and SII are almost identical in focus as they are both in the red, but I still refocus when changing. My OIII is different. This seems standard where the R and GB focus positions are off on the Samyang. I may have shown this before, but below was a test I made a while back, this was focused for OIII then switched through the RGB filters: Perhaps, but with slightly wider filters and stopping down the lens, maybe not too much. -
And Yet another C2022 E3 (ZTF)
geeklee replied to tomato's topic in Imaging - Widefield, Special Events and Comets
I went a little bit of a round about way. I used StarXTerminator to save all the calibrated, debayered frames as starless. Then used PI's updated CometAlignment process. The exported frames from this were then integrated in PI with mainly defaults (the CometAlignment process documentation has a basic workflow and tips). A little smearing still if pushed too hard. Got: I did the same as you for the stars though - brought the APP image stacked normally into PI and then extracted the stars. -
And Yet another C2022 E3 (ZTF)
geeklee replied to tomato's topic in Imaging - Widefield, Special Events and Comets
Under the "4) Register" tab, change mode to: You'll then get prompted during registration about time shot metadata and then asked to select the comet nucleus in certain frames (like the first two and then the last, for example). -
C/2022 E3 (ZTF) - visual and images
geeklee replied to geeklee's topic in Imaging - Widefield, Special Events and Comets
Thanks @glafnazur @tomato If you squint in a darkened room, the faint ion tail is just visible!😅 -
And Yet another C2022 E3 (ZTF)
geeklee replied to tomato's topic in Imaging - Widefield, Special Events and Comets
That looks great @tomato Was it tricky bringing the mono and OSC together on this? I was thinking 60s was a sweet spot but 30s does look better. I tried 120s too and the nucleus became a very clear line to my eye, although 60s is getting that way.