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Old 01-02-2014, 03:12 PM
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Shiraz (Ray)
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Shiraz is offline
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: ardrossan south australia
Posts: 4,918
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley View Post
Spectacular image Ray. Such great detail and great framing and composition.

Colourwise there is a small amount of red in the background so I would suggest knocking the reds back in the shadow areas using the colour balance tool.

Greg.
thanks Greg. Will reprocess when I have had some sleep.

Quote:
Originally Posted by tilbrook@rbe.ne View Post
Great stuff Ray!

Still think I'm looking at an image from a 12" astrograph, just amazing it's from an 8"!

Colour looks good to me, and I see what Greg means about the background, didn't really notice till he pointed it out.

Cheers,

Justin.
thanks Justin. This scope seems to be able to get down close to the seeing limit most of the time. I am in the process of working up a 10 inch, which will provide larger image scale and possibly better resolution if the seeing is really good and I can get rid of all the mechanical bugs in the new scope.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Astroman View Post
Nice image Ray, didn't know that little fella was there, cool! one for the dark sky I think....
Hi Andrew. Thanks.

Quote:
Originally Posted by alpal View Post
Hi Ray,
Wow - magnitude 11 & you pulled most of the arms out of the noise.
Even better in that it's maximum elevation is only 58 degrees.
Is your site semi dark?

well done.

cheers
Allan
Thanks very much Allan. This site is in a rural town, which could be good. However, a couple of ks to the south is a large grain silo, the exterior of which is always lit for some purpose?? (mercury lighting I think) plus a dolomite crushing plant that puts out huge amounts of sodium light. If the transparency is high, it's pretty good, but it can be a real trial if there is some haze around and the target is in the south.

Quote:
Originally Posted by marc4darkskies View Post
Very nice Ray!

What's with the apparent CA obvious on the bright stars? Mis-registration?

Cheers,
Marcus
Thanks Marcus. Long story so apologies:
1. the scope tube is too small for imaging and the support bits for the secondary spider can intrude into the light column if the secondary is even slightly misaligned, causing diffraction
2. the scope was being used with a temporary secondary while the glue set on a new one - I did not get around to aligning it perfectly, so there were asymmetric diffraction skirts around the stars.
3. I carried out a meridian flip half way through the colour data so the stars have differing diffraction skirts, depending on when they were imaged. The result is the apparent CA on the bright stars when the data is stretched.

won't do a meridian flip in the middle of colour data again - maybe I should reprocess to get rid of it - shouldn't be impossible. Working up a new scope so this should be a thing of the past - I hope

regards ray

Last edited by Shiraz; 02-02-2014 at 08:46 AM.
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