View Single Post
  #2  
Old 01-06-2010, 09:57 PM
floyd_2's Avatar
floyd_2 (Dean)
Registered User

floyd_2 is offline
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Cecil Hills (Sydney)
Posts: 552
Hi Peter,
I thought that I might chip in as a DSI II owner, but I'm pretty far from being a guru and as always am happy to be corrected.

I know that drizzle processing is touted as being able to add detail to a shot, but I think that you need to drizzle with the right settings for it to have a chance (which you may already be doing). Drizzle processing won't have much effect if you don't use it to enlarge your images. It can be used to de-rotate your images in simple mode, but it won't actually have an effect on image resolution.

The rule of thumb is to reduce your pixel fraction by the number of frames that you're stacking, up to a minimum of about 0.7. If you're not doing a mosaic, in which cause you'll need a guide camera with the same resolution as the imaging camera, you'll only need to use the Drizzle Resolution and Pixel Fraction settings. The Extended View setting is only for mosaics, where Envisage will issue guide commands to your scope to move it in such a way that your images can be combined to form a larger image from a mosaic of smaller images.

Another thing to note is that the historgram setting is applied to the output image as the drizzle process is taking place, so it's worth making sure that it's set the way you like it.

Are you saving your files in FITS format and keeping all of your individual frames. It's the best thing to do rather than using lossy jpeg and combining in real time as you shoot. You can drizzle your FITS files in offline mode, and spend more time imaging during the evening.

No doubt you already know all of this stuff, but I thought that it might be worth a mention just in case there were one or two things that were of interest.

Dean
Reply With Quote