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Paramount
20-03-2011, 10:13 PM
Hi all
Orinarily I wouldn't contemplate RGB imaging when there is a full moon but I had been shooting some Ha data for M81 and M82 and I thought "Nothing ventured nothing gained" so I gave it a try. By this time the subject was close to the meridian and an almost full moon was high in the south of the sky, the red subframes looked ok so I carried on and finished just as it was starting to get light hence the reason why there was only 14 green sub frames. The Ha was blended into the red channel. This was taken with the FSQ106ED at f5 with a Starlight Xpress SXVF H9 on a Paramount ME, autoguided by a lodestar and OAG. This was very challenging to process due to light gradients and trying to control the cores of the galaxies and although far from perfect I am quite pleased with the overall result. It is quite a while since I tried this pair of subjects together, in fact I tried them shortly after I sarted imaging and that effort can be seen at the beginning of the galaxy page in the image gallery on my website http://www.imagingtheheavens.co.uk
The full size high resolution image can be seen at http://www.pbase.com/imaging_the_heavens/image/133286726/original
I will have another go at this when the sky is a bit darker, but hopefully this may give people a bit of encouragement that reasonable RGB results can be obtained even with bright moonlight present
Thanks for looking
Best wishes
Gordon

strongmanmike
21-03-2011, 09:22 AM
Excellent job under the conditions Gordon, really good. The Ha areas in M82 are very cool. If you could just get some more colour deffinition in to the galaxies, more blue?.. it it would look even better :thumbsup:

Mike

allan gould
21-03-2011, 09:42 AM
Just wish that we in the Southern Hemisphere could get a good run at these galaxies as they are both spectacular in their own right. I especially love M82 with the highly excited has being expelled from the disc.

multiweb
21-03-2011, 12:06 PM
Real nice. Love the details in there. :thumbsup:

RobF
23-03-2011, 09:48 PM
Yes, wonderful work.
I'm with Allan too - we need someway to get a 1 in 100 day 30 degree wobble in the Earth axis (one quick wobble wouldn't upset anything would it? "Wobbit's Wobble" :P)