Quote:
Originally Posted by Tulloch
Excellent work, and a great animation too!
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Thanks Andrew.

I went through most of the tut videos and starting to tweak capture parameters and other things. So much to learn. Focusing is still a challenge for me. It's hit and miss still, not 100% happy with it. Too reliant on the Bath mask for deepsky.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Saturnine
Nice work Marc, did you notice in the animation that after the Io shadow starts crossing the disc, that Ganymede also starts to transit at top left, also as Callisto is about to pass behind Jupiter on the right hand side of the planet.
I was out doing much the same targets about the same time but no animation. Also Theophilus is one of my favourite areas on Lunar and imaged it that night as well. Not trying to intrude on your post but this is mine from that session.
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Thanks Jeff. All good mate, no worries at all.

I love to see the same stuff done and compare, even better on the same night. That gives me ideas on doing things differently too and it's great to see people different takes on the same objects. I actually only noticed Ganymede after seeing it in Kev's super sharp color anim. I thought it was a bright storm on jup on my blurrier anim but it was getting darker. I thought that was a bit weird. lol. I did an annotated version this morning after checking Stellarium:
http://www.astropic.net/astro/jup_anim_b_txt.gif
Getting there with the craters names and the processing. Finding a rythm now with settings and workflow that seem to work. I probably over sharpen stuff still or under process it depending on the light. I've been shooting a lot of random stuff still trying to process as best as I can but I'm close to actually start picking what I want to image now.
Tonight should be clear and the red spot is facing us so I'm hoping to get out and get a better finer photo. Maybe try to focus better too. Supposed to rain Wednesday. I want to see if I can flat field the video as well. I get annoying dust donuts on the filter I think.