A few weeks back I posted my first
"work-in-progress" image from my new "narrow-field" observatory setup at Strathalbyn south of Adelaide. I would now like to share with you all the processed final (?) image.
Tech Details:
Telescope: Vixen VC200L with f6.4 reducer
Mount: NEQ6 w EQMOD
Camera: DIY Peltier modded Canon 1000D, with sensor at a nominal regulated 10 C
Guiding: Lacerta OAG with QHY5L-II
Software: SGPro and Pixinsight 1.8
Capture: 125 x 10min subs @ ISO1600 captured over 6 nights
I have pre-processed this using the new Pixinsight Bayer Drizzle feature. From the PI website: "The idea behind Bayer drizzle is pretty straightforward: with a sufficient number of dithered frames, the drizzle integration algorithm can be applied to fill the existing holes in the red, green and blue channels of multiple CFA Bayer images to form a demosaiced RGB color image directly from calibrated raw data without interpolation."
I have tried to process this to show both the extended Ha regions (as much as possible with a straight OSC capture program) as well as central detail. There are also a number of background galaxies in this region which I have sought to highlight. Using
this image from the CHART32 0.9m telescope at the high altitude CTIO facility in Chile, I have (just in the Helix region alone) identified more than 50 galaxies in my image.
I have attached here the full frame, a 100% crop to show the central detail, and a graphic illustrating some of the background galaxies that I have visually identified from the CHART32 image.
Hi-res version of my image here for those interested:
http://www.astrobin.com/full/115556/D/ (edit: link updated to revised version)
I have something going on with the optical alignment as there are some funky stars in the top corner. Might be collimation (i performed collimation using the vixen visual procedure followed by a star test), or perhaps sensor tilt...? Im thinking of experimenting during the next full moon period with some shims to see if that fixes the issue
Any comments, advice, criticism appreciated