Weather been terrible in Brisbane so thought id go through my crappy dust-ridden shots i last took with my new ED127.
I am seeing, what i think is chromatic aberrations. If it is CA then i will be rather disappointed given this is meant to be a triplet APO. Sure it is cheap, but id expect this only from an achromatic, even if it is a bad APO.
The stars are bloated as a result.
Googling has brought two possibilities, if it is not CA: atmospheric refraction (terrible seeing?) or a tilt between optical elements (scope stuffed, send it back... hope not).
Seeing on the first day i took some photos was shocking. It was so bad that i was watching the PHD tracking box twitch a few pixels up/down/side-to-side, so i disregarded most of that data from that day.
Here are a few pictures:
First picture, bottom left of an image. You can see the blue halo, but it doesn't cover the entire star. The orange colored star also has a nice blue halo on half of it and a slightly darker orange tinge on the other.
Second pic, bottom left of another image. Halo still visible but a spike in both images?
Third pic: This is a star from the middle of an image. Halo is rather uniform.
Fourth pic: Bright stars are giving halo's. This is on a DSLR, not sure if this is common on not, but i don't remember seeing any halo's on my ED80.
Fifth pic: Another halo, this star is not in the center, its more towards the bottom left of the picture. The halo is not centered on the star, which makes me wonder if it is an optical issue.
I've checked some of my other images as well, they all have CA on the stars but there does not seem to be a pattern. The CA only normally covers some of the star, half of it, at different areas on the outer regions of the image, in the center it is generally uniform.
Is this likely to be CA, or the seeing was horrible, or am i looking at an optical problem?
Other possible causes that i can think of:
- I had changed the white balance profile on my camera. It was set to AWB, but as it is modified i believed that it may be giving me false colors so i tried to setup a customer white balance by taking a photo of a uniform white piece of paper in direct sunlight. I have since removed this profile and set it back to auto, but haven't had a chance to try it yet (damn Brisbane weather). Possible that seeing was terrible, creating jitter during the exposures and the white balance profile was giving off too much blue?
- Might be normal; but i have a mount/tracking problem. I was using my lodestar for the first time and was having huge troubles getting it to 'stay' tracking. It was tracking really well... too well, so well that PHD complained often that the star didn't move. I thought that was because my polar alignment was spot on, but maybe something else is going on. Dec would often flatline (causing PHD to throw a beep, sometimes only once, sometimes twice). I had the best luck when using 0.5second exposures. 1 second or higher would often throw the beeps. Included screenshots showing this.
Maybe it was just tracking really well, or could it be my DEC axis is binding in my HEQ5? I did have some noticeable slop in my DEC axis so i tightened the worm gear to remove the play. I can turn the gears with my finger easy and the mount doesn't appear to complain about it.
- I am using a Hotech field flattener (not reducer) on it. Could this be inducing the problem? Sadly i never thought to try without the FF in place!
- Am i horribly over-sampling?
Some details:
Camera: Canon 1100d (modified)
Mount: HEQ5 Pro
Scope: Northgroup ED127, moonlight focuser.
FF: Hotech FF
Any suggestions are welcome.