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Old 22-05-2007, 11:01 PM
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Terry B
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Eta Carina Nebula

Dear All
I have bought a skywatcher 120mm F5 refractor to use mainly as a guide scope. Whilst this is a pretty low end scope I have had a go at imaging through it. With my CCD the field is about 40arcmin wide. I must say it makes for simpler imaging compared to the VC200l with an image width of 14arcmins.
I haven't got the colours correct yet. The images through the blue filter was unusable as my focus was bad and I had some fog on the filter (it was getting pretty cold). I have faked it using the green image for both the blue and green channels.
The exposures were short. luminescence were 15 secs only X 24 and totals of 3 mins/ colour.
I could not use any longer exposures as the blooming became much too much with longer exposures. Even still a number of stars including eta carina had full wells. Not sure how to get around this.
So how do you get around the blooming?
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Old 22-05-2007, 11:10 PM
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ballaratdragons (Ken)
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Blooming stars (I'm fed up with them!!!!) are a bug-bear of low-end webcams. Gotta pay big bucks to get around it, or get a DSLR.
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Old 23-05-2007, 09:07 AM
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Terry B
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The blooming is a pet. I'm not using a low end webcam but the same chip as in a sbig ST7. The antiblooming version is nowhere as sensitive. THe problem is saturated stars with short exposures. This makes it difficult to image associated nebulosity etc. My setup will saturate a mag ~3 star in less than 1 sec so the 15 secs for eta carina certainly starts to bloom.
I don't think a digital SLR would help except that it isn't as sensitive.
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Old 23-05-2007, 05:09 PM
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Dr Nick (Nick)
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I see ehere the "Blooming stars" comment came from, but still nice!
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