CCD vs Film? Lots of time vs no patience? Alright, this is your place to discuss all the astrophotography what's and what's not. You can discuss about techniques, accessories, cameras, whatever....just make sure you also post some nice photos here too!
[Moved from Observation Session to correct forum here. Pictures taken at Tampines field next between the Swimming Pool and the Mosque on 3 Oct 2004 at 0200 hrs by Coolcat - Moderator
Sure had fun tonight! At least now I roughly know how to go about using the LXD55
The sky was pretty decent tonight. Took some pics of the moon through weixing's 6" Newt. Camera used EOS 20D set at ISO100 1/80
Also took some photos of Orion Nebula. Taken thru my 127MCT with EOS 20D set at ISO800 20"
I've yet to figure out how to stack the images. Will post again once I get that done.
Once again, thank you so much guys for your help! Looking forward to the next obs!
yes Coolcat...I was surprised your Orion shot was only 6 seconds!
I've tried it on my Nikon 4300 and any exposure below 30 seconds yields nothing at all. Anything above that resulted in blurred images. I guess apart from the scope, camera is also important...
glad you had fun last night (or should I say, this morning!).
rich
The Boldly Go Where No Meade Has Gone Before Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R United Federation of the Planets
Pretty images. It's very good start if this is your first attempt at deep sky imaging. The abcd trapezium of M42 is nicely resolved. Since these were taken thru a GEM and there is no field rotation, Registax would be able to align and stack the raw images. This free program could not process CRW but will have no problem with jpeg.
Stacking improves the S/N ratio, allowing one to push further with levels and curves. Bringing out nebulosity and dimmer stuff in the background that would otherwise remain invisible.
Why don't you email me the 8 photos and I'll experiment with stacking them?
Anyway, I also took a shot of orion a few weeks back but was shy to share it... tracking was rough, but was surprised to see the 'rainbow', details in the dust and hints of the 'wings'. 15", canon ixus5, etx90ra.