Hi all
Finally got a 450D on Saturday, a shop in Newcastle had one. Its not modded, I plan to use it as my daytime camera as the ol 300D is getting long in the tooth and the Live View comes in handy for some manual focus lenses I have. However I still wanted to test it with astro imaging, so chose the Ghost of Jupiter, as being blue, one doesnt lose much by using unmodded cameras
6x150sec ISO200. 10 inch f5.6 newtonian. This is a full res. crop of the centre of the original 12 MP image. The high dynamic range of the nebula put the 14 bit raw imaging to work. No filters used. Processed in Iris (yes it happily works with the raw files of the new camera) and PS as usual. Live view didnt work for this area as there were no stars bright enough, so I used the normal method of taking 10 sec images and checking focus. Live view on brighter stars ROCKS, it is fantastic. I would like to get a modded 450D later, both for astro, and infrared work. (save up the money first)
Scott
Probably better than your previous efforts on this with the OIII filter really, this looks very natural and you are now showing the orange in the central star.
Perhaps this should be called the "Eye of God" instead of the Helix...?
Thanks all
I used very slight Wavelet function in Iris.
Yes these nebulae go better without filters.
Indeed it looks more like an eye than the Helix, or any other object Ive seen
Was great to get photons from the sky after 2 weeks nearly of rain.
Scott
Thnaks
Yep, my eyes and fingers provide the guiding interface from Q guider cam. to mount, and I provide the "go to" to puch the scope around with the help of the Argo Navis to locate objects.
Scott
Thnaks
Yep, my eyes and fingers provide the guiding interface from Q guider cam. to mount, and I provide the "go to" to puch the scope around with the help of the Argo Navis to locate objects.
Scott
A quick question about "Live View".
With my little camera, when set to manual focus, it will digitally zoom in on the object so you can see it better to adjust the focus.
Is "Live View" similar or how is it different?