View Full Version here: : Saturn February 11, 2007
Zac Pujic
14-02-2007, 10:43 PM
31 cm Newtonian. f/28 with 9 mm Nagler. Phillips ToUcam Pro for RGB channel. SkyNyx 2.1 for luminance channel. Frames stacked with Registax (don't ask how many, I can't remember, I don't write these things down :).
February 11, 2007. Thanks for looking.
Zac Pujic
Brisbane, Australia
http://astroimg.org
[1ponders]
14-02-2007, 10:49 PM
Wow! Nicely done Zac. :clap:
jjjnettie
15-02-2007, 12:21 AM
What a beauty!
Well done and thanks for posting.
Great capture.
:thumbsup:
iceman
15-02-2007, 04:59 AM
Nice colouring, Zac!
rmcpb
15-02-2007, 09:22 AM
Nice shot :)
will you check out the colours in that!!!
v/nice :)
Fantastic image Zac, the banding and colours are spot on.
Great imaging
davidpretorius
15-02-2007, 12:43 PM
top stuff.
ok, help the tasmanian time. Bird has kindly lent me his L075, but i do not have filter wheels.
SO.......How does one go about merging a b/w image as a luminance channel to the colour toucam image
PLUS, is there time enough for swapping cameras to be done with jupiter????? (I think I know the answer already :( )
sheeny
15-02-2007, 06:31 PM
Beautiful image Zac!
I captured some saturn last night but the avi's were very rough. I think a combination of dew and dust on the corrector plate (and maybe jet stream -I haven't checked) blew everything to mush at high magnification...
Al.
Darrell
15-02-2007, 10:04 PM
i can only hop i can do as well one day
:thumbsup:
Chrissyo
15-02-2007, 10:21 PM
Great shot Zac! Those colours are lovely:D
Zac Pujic
16-02-2007, 01:04 AM
David
To do LRGB, you need Photoshop. You don't need the newest version, but at least version 5 since you need the layers function. The luminance channel (L) is just a b/w image with high detail obtained from a good b/w camera. The colour (RGB) channel is a colour image which can be poor and noisy and is made using a poor colour camera. Here is how I do it. Others may have different techniques.
To combine the two, you open the colour image and paste the b/w image into it. This gives you two layers. You then make the top layer 50% transparent so you can see the bottom layer. You then rotate and rescale one of the images so they overlap, as closely as possible. Obviously you have to have two layers so that you can control one image independently of the other.
Finally, you go the layers properties for the b/w image and make it "luminance". This is usually the last (bottom) option in the newer versions of photoshop.
This now gives the resulting image the image quality of the b/w image with the colour of the colour image. I usually pass the colour image through the photoshop noise filter. Then tweak the image so dynamic range in the histogram covers the whole range.
I usually use photoshop but I think other programs, perhaps paint shop pro, can be used instead. I'm not sure.
I hope that helps.
Zac
davidpretorius
16-02-2007, 08:26 AM
thanks zac
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.