Although ours isn't much, perhaps even awful, we believe it to be the fourth best in the world, mostly because it is small, faint, and no-one else has done it. There is your image, of course, which will be better. Then there is the ESO VLT image from Paranal in infrared, and a truly superb image from Capella observatory in the high desert in Namibia.
What ours does have: it is far deeper than the other three. Notice the broad, faint extension of the spiral toward six o'clock, which does not appear elsewhere.
Aspen CG16M on 20 inch PlaneWave. Lum 13.5 hrs, RGB 2 hrs each in 30 min subs. Image scale 0.55 sec arc / pixel.
Edit: First version was over-sharpened. Attached is a more natural-looking thumbnail. We've edited the full version in situ.
Fantastic results. It is a lot deeper than the others
Thanks Houghy!
Quote:
Originally Posted by willik
I like the big version it looks it as more detail and sharper
very nice image indeed.
Martin
Cheers, Martin, glad you like it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by multiweb
The color turned out really nice and that faint arm is showing nicely too. Very cool.
Thanks muchly Marc. We're a bit puzzled as to why the focus star before each sub was about 3.5 pixels FWHM, but the 30 min subs had an FWHM more like 5.7 pixels. Something is going wrong, either with guiding (guide stars were pretty pathetic) or with motor control or just perhaps with the camera itself leaking charge with time.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RickS
What a pretty little galaxy! Beautifully done, M&T.
Thanks Rick!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Atmos
You may not have the resolution of the professionals but you definitely have the depth! Very nicely captured MnT!
I'm afraid Mike is going to have his decon radar spiking though
Aye, Colin, we thought that with Strong Mike in Texas we might get away with it. We'd better have another version ready pronto.
Nice work team - Beautiful target and great depth indeed.
A tad contrasty perhaps though?
Your Sombrero was less processed looking - not sure exactly how to describe that but hopefully you'll get my meaning
You were right, colleagues. With Strong Mike away, the mice will play. We overdid the sharpening and contrast. Here is the same link, but to a more gentle and natural looking version.
You were right, colleagues. With Strong Mike away, the mice will play. We overdid the sharpening and contrast. Here is the same link, but to a more gentle and natural looking version.
I'll be the contrarian and say I prefer the original. Love the way you got those Ha areas. It doesn't look oversharpened to me.
You often have a sprinkling of green stars. Keep in mind airglow in an otherwise totally dark sky can give green light pollution. Some nights it can be quite intense. See this nightscape:
That green is not accentuated and was real. That was the greenest night I have seen. I did not know the sky was often green until I started doing nightscapes. Now I see it more often than I don't.
It often confused me how come I was getting excess green in some images despite imaging in a near zero light pollution site. Airglow was the answer.
HALVG is a free plugin for Photoshop and is a Photoshop version of SCNR noise reduction tool in PixInsight. It gets rid of the excess green and makes it way easier to balance the colour.
I'll be the contrarian and say I prefer the original. Love the way you got those Ha areas. It doesn't look oversharpened to me.
You often have a sprinkling of green stars. Keep in mind airglow in an otherwise totally dark sky can give green light pollution. Some nights it can be quite intense. See this nightscape:
That green is not accentuated and was real. That was the greenest night I have seen. I did not know the sky was often green until I started doing nightscapes. Now I see it more often than I don't.
It often confused me how come I was getting excess green in some images despite imaging in a near zero light pollution site. Airglow was the answer.
HALVG is a free plugin for Photoshop and is a Photoshop version of SCNR noise reduction tool in PixInsight. It gets rid of the excess green and makes it way easier to balance the colour.
Greg
Thanks for the thoughtful comments and the gorgeous green light pollution image.
Because I'm colourblind, I've just written an automatic green star finder. You were right: it found 'em. Things will be under control shortly!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul Haese
Looks like a tough little sucker. Not seen an image of it before either. Well done team.
Well...I'm back Ya'll...what a trip I just had!. Sheesh including a whole clear night on the Hooker 100 inch (eg. two stars without averted vision inside the Ring Nebula!!!) ...wow ...any way, I'm sitting at Sydney airport waiting for my flight to Canberra and catching up with some IIS images.
This looks bloody good guys the colour is superb, so vibrant the galaxy shape is so cool too. I recon it looks best in the second version, always a fine line and while bloody tired I'm flying on cloud 9 at the moment so a little decon residue is ok by me
Well...I'm back Ya'll...what a trip I just had!. Sheesh including a whole clear night on the Hooker 100 inch (eg. two stars without averted vision inside the Ring Nebula!!!) ...wow ...any way, I'm sitting at Sydney airport waiting for my flight to Canberra and catching up with some IIS images.
This looks bloody good guys the colour is superb, so vibrant the galaxy shape is so cool too. I recon it looks best in the second version, always a fine line and while bloody tired I'm flying on cloud 9 at the moment so a little decon residue is ok by me
Mike.
Thanks, Mike! Welcome back. We are absorbing your 100 inch cloud nine glow right across the Blue Mountains and half way down the western slopes.
Don't think I've seen this one before, thanks for sharing it. Beautiful galaxy... I think it looks a bit oversharpened to my eye still, starting to look a bit wormy.
I may given this one a shot myself, weather permitting