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Old 13-04-2010, 09:46 AM
Chris Southby (Chris)
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M83

Here’s my effort at M83.
Taken through an 8 inch newt on an EQ5, with a 350D and Baader MPCC. Comprised of 170 x 20sec unguided lights taken over 3 nights most lights were taken a couple of weeks ago and 60 were from last night. Stacked and cropped in DSS and roughly processed in RawTherapee. Am waiting to get Photoshop to do further processing.
If anyone has processing tips I would be grateful.
Does anyone know how many lights DSS will take before it crashes? I guess I’ll find out if I keep trying to add to this image.

Cheers

Chris
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Old 13-04-2010, 01:02 PM
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renormalised (Carl)
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Not a bad shot for unguided short subs

Even though it isn't all that bright, you can still see quite a lot of detail in the arms

If you were to guide the shots, you could extend the subs and you'd be getting detail popping out all over the place
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Old 13-04-2010, 01:36 PM
TrevorW
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Chris nothing much is gained by increasing the number of exposures
it's all about signal to noise ratio more signal is collected by taking longer subs

There are different sources of noise in digital images. Dark current noise
increases with time, and is the same for one image or a stack of equal exposure.

Readout noise occurs with every image however, and for short exposures is a significant part of the total noise. The advantage of long exposures is that the readout noise becomes insignificant.

There is an advantage to using shorter exposures in order to
minimize tracking problems however most imagers find a compromise position, using guiding with subexposure times ranging from between 5 and 30 minutes, and then stacking as many as required, usually for total exposures of one to several hours.

With a digital camera, your options are much more limited. In most cases, you will simply collect a great many images at the longest possible exposure. Noise will be large compared to what you would have with a cooled, long exposure camera, but that doesn't mean you can't get quite nice results.


cheers
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Old 13-04-2010, 04:53 PM
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renormalised (Carl)
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Quote:
Chris nothing much is gained by increasing the number of exposures. It's all about signal to noise ratio more signal is collected by taking longer subs
Precisely...that's what I meant by extending the subs...make them longer exposures.
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