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Everything posted by Laurin Dave
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NGC 4244 in Canes Venatici - last one for the season
Laurin Dave replied to gorann's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
Very nice Goran.. I see you’ve bought yet another telescope and have plans for a third observatory for it -
Aircraft Tracks, Covid-19 and Processing
Laurin Dave replied to groberts's topic in Imaging - Discussion
No worries Olly.. its what you taught me! -
Aircraft Tracks, Covid-19 and Processing
Laurin Dave replied to groberts's topic in Imaging - Discussion
If the K3.0 is least noisy then in Photoshop you could either erase the trail using the spot healer or paste the K3.0 over the K2.0 and erase the trail in the K3.0 revealing the trail less K2.0 underneath then flatten.. I do the latter when I don't have many subs -
Aircraft Tracks, Covid-19 and Processing
Laurin Dave replied to groberts's topic in Imaging - Discussion
Can't add anything to your issues with trail rejection other than as James and Olly suggest reducing Kappa, I'd have expected that number of subs to come out clean but clearly not.. but I did want to say how much I enjoyed reading your Blog.. fabulous geology including a 33000' throw fault!! and dinosaurs, brilliant! Somewhere to visit if we're ever allowed out again, Dave -
Astronomy Tools can do this .. just use Custom Scope and enter the focal length .. also CdeC in Setup .. Display
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Please educate me how to setup a C11 for imaging? Help please!
Laurin Dave replied to oymd's topic in Imaging - Discussion
Maybe try putting the clicklock on the reducer and using a nosepiece screwed into the ZWO spacer.. just position it to get roughly the right spacing. I suspect that it will produce a lot of vignetting but at least you will find out if you can reach focus with that arrangement .. and whether movement of the mirror means you will need an OAG for guiding -
A very interesting thread.. I too frequently ponder the advantages of a larger scope than my Esprit150... for speed of capture rather than an increase in resolution which I think will be hard to come by in the UK . but then I look at this and wonder why.. another M51 this time from Bortle 4/5 Berkshire 12.5 hrs lum 5 hrs a channel RGB and 15 hrs Ha on piggybacked Esprit100. not as good as the Haute Alpes but getting close.. Dave
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Very nice Goran... just to show how isolated it is here's my recent version uncropped and annotated in Pixinsight (apologies for gatecrashing) Dave
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All Sky Camera 17th April 2020
Laurin Dave replied to Skipper Billy's topic in Imaging - Widefield, Special Events and Comets
Lovely .. you’ve got that working very well -
Thank you … Pixinsight says 57 PGC galaxies.. and that's not all of them...
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Captured last night, planetary nebula Messier 97 the Owl Nebula and Messier 108 a barred spiral galaxy in Ursa Major. The Owl planetary nebula is located approximately 2,030 light years away in the constellation Ursa Major. It was discovered by French astronomer Pierre Méchain on February 16, 1781. When William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, observed the nebula in 1848, his hand-drawn illustration resembled an owl's head. It has been known as the Owl Nebula ever since. The nebula is approximately 8,000 years old. It is approximately circular in cross-section with a little visible internal structure. It was formed from the outflow of material from the stellar wind of the central star as it evolved along the asymptotic giant branch. The nebula is arranged in three concentric shells, with the outermost shell being about 20–30% larger than the inner shell. The owl-like appearance of the nebula is the result of an inner shell that is not circularly symmetric, but instead forms a barrel-like structure aligned at an angle of 45° to the line of sight. The nebula holds about 0.13 solar masses of matter, including hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulphur. Its outer radius is around 0.91 light years and it is expanding with velocities in the range of 27–39 km/s into the surrounding interstellar medium. Messier 108 is a barred spiral galaxy also in the constellation Ursa Major. It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in1781 or 1782. From the perspective of the Earth, this galaxy is seen almost edge-on. This galaxy is an isolated member of the Ursa Major Cluster of galaxies in the Virgo supercluster and is about 45million light years away. It has a morphological classification of type SBbc, a barred spiral galaxy with somewhat loosely wound arms. 1.5hrs each RGB and 2 hrs Lum through Esprit150/SX46 plus 3hrs Oiii and 2hrs Ha through Esprit100/ASI1600. Processed in Pixinsight and Photoshop.. the outer shell is just starting to show. Thanks for looking Dave
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The Moon, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter
Laurin Dave replied to Laurin Dave's topic in Celestial Events Heads Up
Thanks.. my Dad loved his wireless and when we lived in Carshalton and then Wanstead that's where he had his aerial pointed! -
The Moon, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter
Laurin Dave replied to Laurin Dave's topic in Celestial Events Heads Up
Nice one Dave.. is that Wrotham mast in the distance? -
Very nice Steve, particularly impressive result given that you had no green subs. Dave
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Given that the guiding looks good I’d suspect flexure between the OAG camera and the Imaging camera. ZWO wobbly OAG stalk perhaps or something else a bit loose .
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The Moon, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter
Laurin Dave replied to Laurin Dave's topic in Celestial Events Heads Up
Thank you, April/May 2002 that was, I have a slide of them all somewhere that I took whilst showing them to the local cub group .. I shall have a look for it -
The Moon, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter
Laurin Dave replied to Laurin Dave's topic in Celestial Events Heads Up
Another chance tomorrow morning if the forecast holds .. with the Moon below Mars -
The Moon, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter
Laurin Dave replied to Laurin Dave's topic in Celestial Events Heads Up
Me too.. I blame lack of sleep -
Adam.. ie @tooth_dr had caught it this morning... reported on another thread..
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Up early this morning to capture Mars Saturn Jupiter and the Moon over nearby fields.. Nikon D750, Samyang 135, fixed tripod, 10s thanks for looking Dave
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I use SGPro and just focus on whatever filter I’m using (focusses on filter change and every 1 deg C.. ) takes a while with the CCD on narrowband but for LRGB I can’t see any time advantage using L (or another filter)and an offset..