View Full Version here: : On the move..
Peter Ward
19-08-2019, 04:04 PM
During the 2018 Malin award presentation I was overawed by the depths to which DM analysed images for their veracity.
During the presentation showed a USGS geological survey image of the Moon and overlaid it on the excellent lunar image by Stefan Buda and indeed verified the colours of the lunar terrain matched the documented geology, and were not a "Photoshop" fudge.
During the recent wash-up to this year's awards David let slip that my M42 image underwent similar scrutiny: there are stars in M42 that have significant proper motion. This was news to me.
But which one(s)? I recently decided to find out.
Using the Hipparcos satellite data within TheSkyX I located a suitable candidate, then up-scaled my image data to match that of a high-resolution ESO/Hubble image and created a .html rollover image.
The results are here (http://www.atscope.com.au/BRO/roll/M42PM.html)
The roving star was indeed not at the same location as in the Hubble image and proved to be a very good thing as far as I was concerned! :)
Atmos
19-08-2019, 04:49 PM
That is fascinating Peter! It also appears as if the fainter star at 3 o'clock is moving "up" while the brighter one is moving "down".
glend
19-08-2019, 05:00 PM
Good to know the entries are properly vetted to prevent presentation of material which does not match recent positioning, or positioning that matches the date supposedly captured. Now that this is known, someone will likely find a way to move the appropriate stars to the location which corresponds to their supposed capture date, if they haven't already. Perhaps there needs to be a category for "Best Fake".
Peter Ward
19-08-2019, 05:07 PM
Ta.
Unfortunately with distortion from two totally different optical systems the image registration by Pixinsight is not perfect....hence I'd only have confidence in larger apparent shifts
multiweb
19-08-2019, 05:14 PM
That's good to know he's very thorough. With all the montaged crap that goes around these days I'm not surprised. Top shot. :thumbsup:
Peter Ward
19-08-2019, 06:17 PM
Yep...DM doesn't miss much and is a stickler for accuracy. :thumbsup:
Fascinating!
(said with raised Vulcan eyebrow)
kinetic
20-08-2019, 01:03 AM
That is just an amazing animation, Peter!
I love this sort of stuff!
Steve
dave_galera
20-08-2019, 01:38 AM
Fascinating Peter!
Geoff45
20-08-2019, 06:13 AM
Interesting. Glad to see that photos are so well vetted.
multiweb
20-08-2019, 08:24 AM
Could be an interesting project to shoot that star every year and make an animation.
h0ughy
20-08-2019, 09:10 AM
Well that certainly stops adding years of Data together . Interesting and informative
Peter Ward
20-08-2019, 11:40 AM
Funny you should mention that, as it was raised/suggested by DM... not totally tongue-in-cheek...but more due exasperation due a number of entries that, shall we say, were altered for "creative purposes" :lol:
Placidus
20-08-2019, 02:37 PM
Bravo, Peter.
One of the reasons I felt attracted to science, astronomy, and astrophotography: In earliest (right wing, authoritarian) school we were taught a lot of absolute crap (such as "sport builds character and makes you a man, (see any newspaper for sledging, drugging, knobbling, goosing, and other manipulations, not to mention the number of famous sportsmen up on assault charges), similar errors in Politics and Religion, etc. But what we were taught in science seems to have basically held true. To see Triton orbiting Neptune (at amazing speed - just one day is more than enough) is very reassuring. Your image shows that unlike elections races and boxing matches, the Fixed Stars are not fixed.
From memory, Menkent has quite a brisk proper motion. We must look up our Position and Proper Motion catalogue and find some other goodies.
Once again, Bravo.
Best,
Mike
Peter Ward
21-08-2019, 11:31 AM
Thanks one and all for your feedback. I was frankly taken aback by the level of interest shown.
I guess it also demonstrates what can be done with truly high-resolution data (BTW I would not try this with my FSQ106) ...something the pros do with the likes of Hipparcos to the extreme, but certainly I guess it shows it's not out to the realm of amateur data. :thumbsup:
Andy01
21-08-2019, 01:46 PM
Very cool - so we're not just pretty pictures, there's some real science going on there. :thumbsup:
Well done! :)
Slawomir
21-08-2019, 07:33 PM
Very interesting - thank,you for sharing Peter.
Actually I think quite the opposite - data stacked from years apart could potentially be used for identification and estimation of such star movements - Panta Rhei indeed :thumbsup:
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