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tornado33
05-05-2009, 10:29 PM
Last night I imaged the Vela SNR area with the 300mm lens from Bert, and the Baader 7Nm HA filter.

8x10 mins ISO 800. Modded 350D, 300mm f2.8.

Larger version here (http://d1355990.i49.quadrahosting.com.au/Scott/vela8x10minsiso800hamod350d300mmf2. 8big.jpg)

Moon was well past 1st quarter.
Scott

Craig_L
05-05-2009, 11:12 PM
Very nice Scott. Would like to have a go at this as well. Do you know RA and DEC that section is?

dugnsuz
05-05-2009, 11:22 PM
Excellent Scott - you've captured some very nice intricate detail there.
I'm very impressed and heartened as I'll probably take possession of my Astronomik 13nm Ha filter tomorrow!! If I can capture detail close to that I'll be happy.
Doug

bluescope
06-05-2009, 12:25 AM
Nice image Scott .... I assume the Ha filter was a 2" to be used with a DSLR ?

:thumbsup:

peter_4059
06-05-2009, 06:28 AM
Lovely image Scott. Beautiful detail and I really like the wide field.

Alchemy
06-05-2009, 06:30 AM
some nice cosmic spiderwebs

sheeny
06-05-2009, 06:57 AM
Heaps of detail there, Scott!:thumbsup:

One of the best I've seen.

Al.

Bassnut
06-05-2009, 07:09 AM
wow, thats nice, supprised that the 7nm Ha filter worked that well on a DSLR.

Bolts_Tweed
06-05-2009, 04:12 PM
Great detail Scott



Just incase you cant wait for Scotts reply (maybe imaging tonight) I usually centre on RA: 08h 31m 38.8s Dec: -44°07'12" which centres what I call the two rings on the right of Scotts image. Might be of some help.

M

avandonk
06-05-2009, 04:46 PM
Glowing monatomic hydrogen bubbles from afar indeed. The 7nm filter has better contrast than my 13nm filter. It is great to be able to catch such faint stuff with affordable equipment.

Bert

jjjnettie
06-05-2009, 05:42 PM
So delicate!
Beautiful.
Thanks for co ords Mark.

seeker372011
06-05-2009, 06:05 PM
very nice-despite the moon

gregbradley
06-05-2009, 08:24 PM
A superb image. Beautiful image scale, you captured the whole thing without making it seem too small.

Greg.

Craig_L
06-05-2009, 08:43 PM
Thanks Mark.

jase
06-05-2009, 09:06 PM
Good to see the Vela in all its glory instead of just a snippet for a change. Nicely captured. A little grainy look'in on the large image, but I guess that's the price to pay with a 7nm Ha filter on a DSLR. Good work none the less.

tornado33
06-05-2009, 10:32 PM
Thanks all
I centred on ra 08h 29 mins, dec -44, 46, frame orientated long axis north-south. In this image east is up. Im glad I fitted in most of it, its hard to be sure till after processing is done, as the nebulosity is so faint it barely shows up on each sub.

Yes the Ha filter is 2 inch. Its actually one of Baader's prototypes, and is un mounted, but thats okay, it sits snugly in the back of the 300mm lens, along with a clear IR filter to make sure no unwanted IR light sneaks past. Baader actually gave me the filter as thanks for their using some of my earlier DSLR images shot with their UHC-S filter :)

Bert has the right idia for narrowband imaging, by cooling the camera. The dark current noise is more noticable with narrowband imaging, particularily with 7 Nm. The background is so dark that a good deal of what background there is, is thermal noise. Though proper dark subtraction gets rid of most, it cannot get rid of every bit.

Overall the modded camera accounts well for itself considering only about 1/3 of the pixels are used (the red ones) Theres no usable signal with the green and blue, thats why I only use the red channel and delete the other two. Id give my right arm to Canon if they made a DSLR without the bayer filter (a monochrome sensor).

The 300mm lens comes in handy, helping offset the reduced signal with its very fast f ratio of 2.8.

Baader also happen to make their HA filter with a slightly offset passband, that favours fast instruments with a wide light cone, and so is perfectly suited for the 300mm lens :)

I should mention that on setting up I first find a bright star and take some short test images, to get the star centred, then I align a finderscope on it, then use that to see what the lens is pointed at, as the filter is completely dark to the eye, only the moon and Sirius are bright enough to see in the camera viewfinder. I get proper focus by taking 10 second test images, then adjusting focus till stars are as small as possible. I have camera connected to laptop so I can examine the images at full size on the laptop rather then the cameras tiny screen, then I locate a guidestar with the Q guider cam on the Orion 80mm short tube guidescope, magnify it 400% with the Q guider software, put an artificial reticle over it, sit back and manually guide it and wait for the neighbours cat to jump on my lap and keep me company for the imaging session :)

alan meehan
06-05-2009, 10:44 PM
Nice work Scott,good to see you got some work in even though the moon is glowing

RobF
07-05-2009, 08:55 PM
Wow. Fascinating shot. Thanks for posting.