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andrew s

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Everything posted by andrew s

  1. Not directly related to your issue but ZWO released new drivers etc. in early Jan that solved the issues I was having with my ASI 294mm pro. There is also a firmware update for the ASI120MM. Regards Andrew
  2. As has already been said it's because light from further away has not reached us yet. The light from furthest away we can detect is the CMB. Every day we see a little bit further as light from the CMB seeeps past us. The light from the CMB is not the oldest/furthest signal we could possibly detect. In principle we could detect gravitational waves from before the time of last scattering that released the CMB radiation. Regards Andrew
  3. I had a similar issue and was told by ZWO on their forum it was due to ice crystals. The cure for me was to cool the sensor slowly. I run a script that cools it to 0 then waits 2mins then in 1 degree steps down to -10 with a two minute wait each step. Regards Andrew
  4. Well there is in the software I use including ASCOM, The Sky X and Voyager. It must be a hangover in SharpCap. However, I now see what you meant. Regards Andrew
  5. Not sure what you mean but see this: " Offset is exactly as its name implies: it is an offset that is applied to the histogram curve which shifts it – offsets it – farther to the right on the histogram by some amount. This ensures that the minimum value that any pixel might record is not underexposed and is therefore clipped in the blacks. This is especially important in astrophotography because of the nature of it – some pixels on the sensor might be positioned to look at purely dark space and therefore will collect far, far fewer photons than pixels that has the light from a star, nebula, or other light-producing object pouring into it. Avoiding clipped-black pixels means that you avoid having pixels with insufficient signal or, worse, a value of 0. This is the opposite predicament of an image that has pixels that are clipped-white. Both types of clipped pixels effectively have no data that can be meaningfully acted upon during processing." From here https://daleghent.com/2020/08/understanding-camera-offset Regards Andrew
  6. What did you have in mind? Fog is an excellent blocker or scatterer from UV through visible to IR. Regards Andrew
  7. Ii was going to post this in it's own thread but my wife and I both observed the large sun spot with the naked eye . The filter was the freezing fog that was dimming the Sun to safe levels. In addition the cloud/fog skipping across the surfacethere was a steady dark patch . On just getting home now I confirmed it with the Solar Data Analysis images. Regards Andrew
  8. To be honest I don't see how this will help. Regards Andrew
  9. I have an ODK and have never seen them. I would guess that they should be way out of focus so a reflection from the corrector/ filter etc. must be focusing them. Just a guess though. Regards Andrew
  10. You will need a robust spider design to resist the torque changes as the Newt points to different altitudes. Maybe a truss of some kind like on the Hale 200" (but smaller). I seem to recall a schmidt camera design where focusing was done my moving the mirror with three fine lead screws. Regards Andrew
  11. Yes instrumentation has taken astronomy to a whole new level. While still too expensive for most of us the latest sCMOS cameras have close to 100% quantum efficiency and ridiculous good noise performance. Long gone are the days of alchemy to enhance photographic film. Great image by the way. Regards Andrew
  12. After fighting some hardware problems, consisting of a pc power supply failure and a ZWO guide camera that randomly froze any USB hub it was connected to, I managed to capture an exoplanet transit. Not spectacular or novel but its a first for me. Not the best data with some thin cloud about getting worse near the end. Still learning how to use astro imagej to process the data and how to optimise the signal to noise using a new cmos camera. Regards Andrew PS Top marks to Dave at Pixel Skies for fixing the PC and endless help with the camera.
  13. Socks obey Fermi Dirac statistics and are fermions so two identical socks can't be found together. Regards Andrew
  14. My rig is at PixelSkies and the service is excellent. It's a while ago now but at e-eye I think you had to manage your own roof although I may be wrong. At PixelSkies they manage the roof and place the telescope so it can always shut wherever it's pointing. I am not sure how many places they have left so I recommend contacting them soon. Happy to answer any specific questions you may have. I was second in and am now there longest standing client. Regards Andrew
  15. No you need to understand the possible orbits. It's too complex to post simply so you will have to do your own research. Regards Andrew
  16. No they are not geocentric. You can't have a grid crisscrossing the globe in geocentric orbits which are strictly limited. Regards Andrew
  17. Not one but a whole train of satellites all in the same orbit one behind the other. The aim is to have a near continuous grid for communication purposes. Regards Andrew
  18. My guess (and it is just a guess) would be satellite constellations. Regards Andrew
  19. Yes it does. It managed very nicely before we existed and will carry on regardless once we have gone. Regards Andrew
  20. It's very simple. It's what my English teacher thought was between my ears. More importantly, the Universe is totally unconcerned about whether we can comprehend it or not. It just is. Regards Andrew
  21. Indeed there are. I recall looking into this some 50yrs ago. I can't remember the details but non equilibrium thermodynamics can drive the creation of complex molecules some of which can become auto-catalytic. These types of process can generate the pre life self replicating entities. When that transitions into life is a whole new debate on what is life. Regards Andrew
  22. The eye brain system is very good at selecting moments of good seeing. That's how our visual forebears managed to see such fine details on the moon and planets. Not withstanding a few deluded missteps by some observers. Regards Andrew
  23. I have added counter weights of either roofing lead suitable cut up or small free weights hung on strips of aluminium suitably attached. Regards Andrew
  24. I would not argue with that but the printing press made a step change in the availability of recorded material. It released it from the confines of the monastery, royal libraries or similar repositories and made it available to the population at large. Regards Andrew
  25. I would never have described you thus 😮. Regards Andrew
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