Archive for the ‘Astrophotography’ Category

Unexpected Objects

March 6th, 2010 | No Comments

It always fun to get something unexpected when out imaging, something unexpected in the image that is rather than unexpected things not working. Before I have had planes across the Moon, red and green trails across an image from an airplanes wing lights, the very random trail of an out of focus bug or something zipping around high above.

Tonight though I got this whilst imaging the Leo triplet :

flare

It looks like a satellite flare but from which of the many hundreds of objects in orbit I couldn’t say.

More of the Moon

February 1st, 2010 | No Comments

We had an entire weekend of clear skies! Unfortunately that means we also had a full moon as apparently the two things are connected these days, or at least that’s what it feels like. Lacking the ability to take photos of anything else (I need a 4 x Barlow for Mars) I spent a lot of time testing guiding with the sphinx.

On the first night I used the excellent EQAlign to get my polar alignment as close as possible. The guiding after this was massively improved in declination with very few corrections required, probably the best dec guiding I’ve seen from the sphinx. The RA however was all over the place with very rapid oscillations that the guiding had problems with.

Second night, I spent a lot of time getting the balance of the mount as accurate as possible, had another go with EQAlign to tweak that side then tried again. The result? Excellent RA guiding, but now the declination is a mess showing a slow oscillation as it seems to drift first one way then the other. The horrible declination backlash of the sphinx made this very difficult to manage and adjusting the movement speed or aggression settings only sped up or reduced the oscillation period.

I really like the sphinx, I’ve had a great time with it and learnt a lot, but I think the time is coming for it to be replaced. It is overloaded these days, and the performance of the mount suffers because of this.

Anyway, before heading to bed on Saturday night I took a stack of 100 images of the full moon through the 250mm reflector.

fullmoon-30012010

M42 Redux

January 13th, 2010 | No Comments

I added some additional data to my M42 image, not much to say on it really. The additional data really helps to bring out the fainter nebulosity whilst maintaining good noise control.

m42-3

M81 and M82 – Bodes Galaxy

January 4th, 2010 | No Comments

We had a lovely clear night last night, slightly spoilt by a nearly full moon but not spoilt enough to stop me getting out and doing some images.  I spent some time getting more data for my M42 image which I will hopefully have processed soon, but I also spent some time on M81 and M82.  This was a great test of my guiding setup, I settled for 5 minute exposures at iso800, though I think without the moon I would have been better off at 8 or 10 minutes at iso400. However I am very happy with the result so far, which has been aligned and stacked in Iris and processed in Pixinsight.

m81-m82
  • Orion Optics 250mm F4.7 Reflector
  • Vixen Sphinx SX Mount
  • Baader MPCC
  • Astronomik CLS CCD Filter
  • Canon EOS 1000D
  • 24 x 5 Minute exposures at iso800

Guiding Setup

  • Vixen A70LF refractor with 0.6x Focal Reducer
  • Modified SPC900NC
  • Guidemaster auto guiding software

M42 Quick and Dirty

December 29th, 2009 | 2 Comments

Taking any brief window for imaging as I am at present I managed to sneak an our of clear skies to take a few more images of M42. Guiding for once was working very well after adjusting the counter weights a little. I managed about 33 minutes of data. Each frame being 3 minutes at ISO800, aligned  stacked in Deep Sky Stacker and processed in pixinsight. The Moon was nearly full which reduced the image quality and my exposure time. For some reason I had a lot of colour issues when stacking in Iris, probably due to the addition of the CLS CCD filter. I will need to look into how to resolve that in future.

m42

A slightly different processing from a stack with different options :

m42 - 2

Imaging Setup

  • Orion Optics 250mm F4.7 Reflector
  • Vixen Sphinx SX Mount
  • Canon EOS 1000D unmodified
  • Astronomik CLS-CCD Filter

Guiding

  • Vixen A70LF F12 Refractor
  • Modified Phillips SPC900NC webcam
  • 0.6x Focal Reducer
  • Guidemaster

Images

  • 11 x 3 minutes @ ISO800
  • Darks and Flats x 15 each
  • Aligned and Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker
  • Processed in Pixinsight

Successful Guiding

December 7th, 2009 | No Comments

It’s been a long road over the summer to get to this point, but I think I finally have this particular nut cracked. This is a single 6 minute frame of the Orion Nebula, unprocessed, washed out by the moon and as it arrived off the camera.

Orion guide test

I’m pretty happy with that, it’s not perfect, there is a slight stretching of the stars. But this one one of 10 test images and they were all of equal or better quality. The stretch is along the RA direction which means the likely causes are periodic error and over correction by the guide software. The dec axis is working beautifully despite it’s frustrating backlash.

Experimentation has shown me that the automated aggression control of guidemaster doesn’t function very well on this mount, disabling that option helped enormously.  Adjusting down the RA autoguide movement speed also reduced the stretch. The next testing step will be to do the PEC recording, however Vixen really need to improve PEC on the starbook, I don’t want to have to do it every time I want to do some imaging!

More Lunar Imaging

December 4th, 2009 | 2 Comments

This is addition to my previous post really, as I had taken more images that I had not processed on Tuesday night. First off though I found my missing mosaic video section! This means I’ve been able to complete the image properly now, without the missing chunk. I’ve also left the colour in and applied a small gausian blue to smooth off some of the sharper edges.

moon3_0

The other data I wanted to process was a set of 30 full frame raw format images of the moon taken with the canon 1000D. These were then stacked in registax, tweaked with wavelets and then dumped out to gimp to adjust the colours. In this case I pushed the saturation levels right up, this brings out more of the subtle changes in the moons surface that the human eye really only see’s in shades of grey but the DSLR picks up.  It’s an effect that I really enjoy and not possible with the mosaic above where every individual section has it’s own balance and variation.

moon_dslr

Lunar imaging with the SPC900NC

December 2nd, 2009 | No Comments

We had a clear night!

No joking, it was clear, in England all night on the 30th, and properly cold as well. It’s been so long since we had a good clear night that I had the roof off the shed just as soon as I could get out outside. The only real damper on this otherwise perfect evening was a big bright moon, which of course ruined any chance of me doing any deep space work. But I have a webcam, and I have EOS movie record, so I figured I would make the best of the night and try my hand at some lunar imaging.

The first thing I wanted to try was capturing a few minutes of video from the Canon 1000D using EOS Movie Record. I set that up and left it running whilst I got myself sorted for the night. A few minutes in I noticed a flicker on the screen from the corner of my eye and made a mental note to check it the next day. This is what I found when I reviewed the video :

moon-silloette

So that was a bit of pure luck on my part, but it makes for a striking image I think.

Next I setup the webcam on the 250mm reflector to try my hand at lunar imaging. At first I thought I would just stick to one area but after a little while I had started to collect connected sections, and from then on it turned into an attempt at a mosaic. This was my first attempt doing this and unplanned so naturally I missed a bit, which I shall kick myself for later.

moon2
  • Philips NPC900NC
  • Baader UV/IR cut filter
  • Orion Optics 250mm reflector

The image is composed of 27 individual frames, each of which came from a 1000 frame avi video, the data was captured with k3ccdtools and stacked in Registax.

In order to build the complete image I first spent a long time in photoshop and came out with something I was happy with. Then out of interest I tried the photostitch tool in Windows live photo gallery. In about three minutes it had aligned, colour corrected and stitched the whole image together far better than I ever could. I was really impressed as about a third of the frames were at an angle compared to the rest due to the scope reversing half way through. So if you have images to align, give it a go, you don’t need to do anything more than select the images and click go, it works out everything else by itself.

The full scale image is some 3360 pixels across and I shall locate some hosting for that soon.

General Updates

November 17th, 2009 | No Comments

The apparently never ending bad weather has put a real dampener on astronomy related activities over the last month or so, clear nights have been few and far between, and when we get them I always appear to be somewhere else!

The south east of England took a good battering over the weekend from a storm, wind speeds were expected to gust up to 85mph. A good test for the shed as this was the worst weather it has had to face since construction, I’m happy to report that everything stayed intact, though I have spotted some ingress of water around the window, another job for the weekend.

Post storm I spent some more time trying to improve the declination backlash of the Sphinx SX mount, with mixed success. I stripped the mount down as far as possible and spent time trying to understand how it is held together and what needs to be adjusted. I adjusted the worm gear as that had some lateral movement, tightened the ring under the declination clamp as I noticed the shaft had some free play, and readjusted the worm to drive mesh.

All this work didn’t quite have the hoped for jump in improvement, guidemaster still reports a declination backlash of 10000 milliseconds! Ten seconds is frankly awful, and I was pretty disappointed that all my hard work resulted in such a minor improvement.

Round about this time is when I noticed guidemaster and ASCOM giving me some odd errors about starbook firmware versions, now this is a brand new starbook received as a replacement for my broken one. One of the first things I had done upon turning it on for the first time was to check the firmware was at the most recent release, and indeed to said v21. However, 21 is not the same as 2.1, a silly mistake on my part and great advert of good practice in logically naming your software releases.

So I updated the firmware and that certainly seems to have improved matters, the declination movement is far more positive now hich should allow me to tighten down the worm / gear mesh a little more.

Slow progress then, but there is movement!

A busy month, but nothing to show!

October 19th, 2009 | 2 Comments

October so far has been a month of frustration, with no end of problems both equipment and software related to wade through. I think there is a light at the end of the tunnel now, and most issues seem to have found a fix. Lets rewind to the start of the month however, and the next clear night after my triangulum image.

It had been my hope that after two nights of testing and work that I might finally have had all of my various issues with guiding sorted out, and so I went out thinking that this night would be an error free night of excellent imaging. Almost immediately however my carefully tested guiding software threw a tantrum and started giving very poor results on nearly every image, odd shaped stars and nasty drifts all over the place. This was not good, the problem appears to be in the declination axis and guidedog didn’t seem to be handling it.

This triggered another night of testing and adjusting, including another session with WCS to get the alignment as perfect as possible, I think I will have to register that software. I ran through every free autoguiding software solution I could locate.

  • PHD Guiding – So much promise but it hates modified webcams even at 5fps.
  • Guidedog – Lovely software, easy to use, but it doesn’t appear to handle dec backlash.
  • Proguider – Looks good, but I couldn’t work it out, needs better documentation.
  • Guidemaster – Bingo!

I eventually tried out Guidemaster, and found software that not only does some excellent calibration routines to work out declination backlash, movement speeds and over useful information, but also manages such useful things as automatic aggression adjustment and automatic setting of single direction declination adjust. That last one is great, declination will normally only drift off one way, so if it only corrects one way then it will always be loaded on the gear and backlash won’t be an issue.

Unlike PHD, Guidemaster has no problems with dropped frames from the SC modified webcam, a real issue with PHD to me. I also liked the calibration routine and the ability to adjust the calibration movement time on both RA and Dec individually, really handy if you are suffering from a lot of backlash.

Once calibrated I ran several five minute test exposures and was massively impressed with the result, it appeared to be guiding far more accurately that I had managed with the other programs, I have to say that it gets my recommendations hands down. It did also however, highlight the issue with the declination axis that had caused Guidedog so many problems. Over 5.5 seconds of backlash and the calibration routine needed 9 seconds of declination travel before it was able to register the movement.

Over the weekend I found the cause, when setting up for an image the declination axis stopped moving entirely. This was a major concern and I immediately stripped the mount down hoping that it wasn’t anything major. It turns out that it was the worm gear assembly, which sits in a captive bolt which is adjusted to restrict the linear movement of the gear whilst allowing it to rotate. For some reason the captive bolt had seized onto the worm shaft, now everytime the declination axis was rotated it was slowly screwing the bolt further into the assembly and eventually clamping itself so tight it could no longer move. Luckily no damage was done, I was able to release the captive bolt assembly and took the time to clean and re-grease it.

Unfortunately that was the end of clear skies for now, I’m really hoping that it was the end of my problems as well, time will tell.