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Shiraz
28-05-2013, 12:50 AM
Hi

Was really lucky with this one. Had roughly set up the mount to test (between clouds) that the focal plane tilt in the camera was fixed (it was) when a clear patch came through. No time for a proper polar alignment, so just did a quick and dirty 2 star alignment as it was – moon was up, so went to a bright Ha target, calibrated PHD and started imaging as quickly as possible.

It was a bit too windy for the mount, so kept the subs short at 200secs and got 9 usable ones for ½ hour total. First time I had tried Ha and it was interesting processing the data - lots less signal to play with. This is only part of the image and it has been scaled down by 0.5 to fit in the posting limit.

Thanks for looking. Regards ray

multiweb
28-05-2013, 07:56 AM
That is one superb shot Ray, really well done. Exceptional actually. Nice work. :thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:

Larryp
28-05-2013, 08:38 AM
Looks great!-lots of detail

RickS
28-05-2013, 08:45 AM
Looks great for 30 minutes, Ray!

jase
28-05-2013, 03:09 PM
Got to be happy with that, Ray! The bok globs punctuate the field very well. Its amazing for such short exposures too. For a first Ha image, you're well on your way to producing some cracker images. Good work.

Shiraz
28-05-2013, 04:52 PM
Thanks for the comments Marc. Good to have something to post when I did not expect it - usually things work out the other way.


Thanks very much Laurie


Thanks very much Rick. I was a bit surprised to get a reasonable image in such a short window. Really looking forward to seeing what the system will do with longer exposure time.


Thanks for the encouragement Jase. Quite a way to go yet, but it was exciting to see this "first step" image take shape as it was assembled by the processing software.

regards ray

strongmanmike
28-05-2013, 06:21 PM
Excellent Ray :thumbsup: that bit of the chicken just looks so cool :)

Mike

clive milne
28-05-2013, 07:30 PM
Ray,
I hope you are still going to go back to M83 for colour data.

Shiraz
28-05-2013, 08:04 PM
Thanks Mike - it is interesting. Also, looks like your new obs is coming along well.


I certainly intend to Clive - just waiting for the clouds and moon to get out of the way. By the way, the Rowe coma corrector works exceptionally well - thanks for the advice.

regards ray

Ross G
28-05-2013, 09:12 PM
Nice photo Ray.

Great detail.

Ross.

clive milne
28-05-2013, 10:39 PM
It's a curious thing, others have tried and failed with that corrector even though it leaves little to be desired optically (when used with a small format sensor). I would put that down to BFD spacing errors giving the Rowe corrector a bad rep' when it isn't applied properly. You seem to have it nailed though.
I'd be interested to see one of your full frame raw images at native resolution. Without seeing that, I couldn't say for certain, but I suspect your system limit is charge diffusion. For a given focal length, that's as good as it gets from the perspective of the application of opto-mechanical principles pertaining to ccd imaging.

regards,
~c

Shiraz
30-05-2013, 12:09 PM
thanks very much Ross


Hi Clive. Will post a raw frame when I have one without field rotation.

For interest, I modelled the system as an obstructed aperture PSF convolved with Gaussian atmospheric blur. Also included a simple charge diffusion term and found that diffusion is not a major issue for this system until it is above about 20% - it would be much more of a problem in undersampled systems. I could not find any crosstalk data for the icx694 (or anything else for that matter), so used 10% for the graph attached. I do not have any independent measure of seeing, so the starting point of 1.5 arc sec was a guess, but the data fit well enough that it seems reasonable to say that the system is practically seeing limited. The real data includes tracking, scattering and stray diffraction (particularly the spider), but the model does not, so the divergence of the curves seems reasonable.

regards ray

atalas
02-06-2013, 05:04 PM
That looks great!well done Ray.

marc4darkskies
02-06-2013, 05:16 PM
Very nicely done Ray! Great tone and detail! Love how the Boks jump out at you!

Cheers, Marcus

RobF
02-06-2013, 06:46 PM
Great going Ray. Congrats.
Was that with the 8" F4?

Shiraz
02-06-2013, 11:36 PM
thanks Louie


thanks Marcus. Agree - Boks are such intriguing objects and this group in particular seems to contrast well with the surrounding nebula.


Hi Rob, thanks - yes, am currently using a 200f4 Newtonian.

regards Ray

broca
03-06-2013, 01:00 AM
Nice work! It is always nice to produce something when you are dealing with clouds and a quick down and dirty alignment. Well done :thumbsup:!

Shiraz
04-06-2013, 12:45 AM
thanks Steve - yes it is nice to get something when expectations were low. regards Ray