Quote:
Originally Posted by Andy01
Crikey Bert, you didn't leave anything on the table there did you!
That is EPIC in scale.
As I'm learning about mosaics myself, may I ask what software you're using to register & merge the images?
Cheers
Andy
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Andy I am using Pixinsight to register and merge the images at 32 bits (floating point) and linear i.e. unstretched.
It is far easier to match panels and feather them mathematically when the data is linear.
At 16 bits all the 3nm narrow band nebulae data is below the first nine bits or 512 levels in 65,536 even with a 32 minute exposure. The really faint stuff is in the first few bits. In a 32 bit image the nebulae data is spread over the first 18 bits or 262,144 levels. By the way it is important to use the 32 bit xisf format for dark flat correction and stacking etc.
Registar is much better at aligning images than Pixinsight because it distorts locally to account for the fact that any image is a flat projection of a spherical real image. The wider the FoV the more noticeable this is.
There is a way to get Pixinsight to distort more locally. Set up the Star Alignment window as below. Setting Spline Smoothness to zero does this. Note unlike Registar, Pixinsight keeps the secondary image borders rectilinear.
I then use GradientMergeMosaic to merge the output of Star Alignment.
GradientMergeMosaic does a very good job of producing seamless mosaics. I set the feather radius to 60 pixels for my data. Sometimes a bright star near the joins can affect the much lower background. Either trim a bit off the image or change the feather radius.
Hope this helps.
Bert