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tilbrook@rbe.ne
25-09-2012, 05:26 PM
Hi,

Galaxies, I find damn difficult to process!!

Especially when the overwhelming feature is back ground. Anyway Iv'e had enough of playing around with them, so here the are good or bad.

NGC 1365 and friends, 5 minute subs at ISO 800 a total of 90 minutes.

Grus quartett, 5 minute subs, at ISO 800 a total of 60 minutes.

Cheers,

Justin.

Paul Haese
25-09-2012, 06:27 PM
Lots to see in both images Justin. Colour balance needs just a little attention in my opinion. All the rest looks good.

marco
25-09-2012, 06:55 PM
Nice shots Justin, the Fornax group is on my to-do list too :)
Clear skies
Marco

David Fitz-Henr
25-09-2012, 09:39 PM
Nice shots Justin, especially for only 90 / 60 minutes total exposures - you should add some more subs and you will bring out even more detail. :thumbsup:

Jbunky86
25-09-2012, 09:59 PM
Fantastic mate:thumbsup:

tilbrook@rbe.ne
26-09-2012, 05:55 PM
Thanks for that!



Thanks David!

You raise a question though.
While my 8" f/4 is doing a good job, it hasn't the resolution of a larger scope or something with 20th wave optics. So how far do you go before hours of imaging become redundent because of resolution?

Or is that a how long is a piece of string question?



Thanks Marco!

Can't wait to see yours, will give me something to study.



Thanks Paul,

Great to have your experienced eye on this site, all I need to do now is work out the best way to balance the colours.

Cheers,

Justin.

David Fitz-Henr
26-09-2012, 07:16 PM
Well, I think that the seeing conditions would limit the resolution more than the accuracy of the optics - I used to get quite good resolution from my home made 200mm which had a cheap chinese mirror. I believe that the rule is that the SNR (signal-to-noise) increases as the square root of the number of exposures; so 25 stacked sub frames would have 25% better SNR than 16 sub frames (5:4 ratio). The optimal length of the sub-exposure is another issue (I think that CCDWare have a calculator on their website for this). With DSLR cameras, I believe that using a higher ISO rating increases the noise as well; also DSLR cameras are OSC (one shot colour) which means that each pixel is dedicated to a single colour (RGB - layed out in a Bayer Matrix), and so the "missing colours" for each pixel need to be interpolated from neighbouring pixels which thus affects the colour resolution (as well as the sensitivity per pixel). Others would have more experience with DSLRs than I so can probably offer better advice.

multiweb
27-09-2012, 11:31 AM
Nice field. Well done. :thumbsup:

marc4darkskies
27-09-2012, 12:03 PM
Very respectable Justin! Nice job. Yes, galaxies are hard to process well!

Why only 5 minute subs though?

Cheers, Marcus

tilbrook@rbe.ne
27-09-2012, 01:29 PM
Thanks David, Marc and Marcus!

It was quite warm that night and I have no cooling yet for my camera, so I stuck to 5 minute subs.

Cheers,

Justin.

Ross G
28-09-2012, 10:14 PM
Nice galaxy photos Justin.

Ross.

tilbrook@rbe.ne
29-09-2012, 08:37 AM
Thanks Ross!

Hope to see some more of your images soon.

Cheers,

Justin.