Quote:
Originally Posted by Andy01
Hmmm - Thanks for posting this blast from the past.
The Ha & O3 detail is incredible - especially the "brain" bubble of the WR star - I can't recall seeing that much detail before. 
That said, the stars are very average by today's standards - no definition, blown out and circled with coloured wide outer haloes.
If you have an RGB set it would be a great exercise to swap out these NB ones.
The pursuit of excellence is one of the core attractions of competitions like the Malins, IAPOTY etc. and you've deservedly been at the forefront every year. 
Interesting to see how far even a highly skilled, awarded and experienced imager like yourself has come over the past decade. 
|
Thanks Andy.
While I have had some success at the Malin's ...I never take it for granted as so many guys in OZ are churning out excellent images these days.
I must admit I am a big fan of David Malin's take on Astrophotography.
While the occasional NB image has got up from time to time, he is terse judge on accurate colour...as it says so much about the physical processes going on within an object.
Fiddle with that and you are unlikely to place well.
My current Alluna 'scope is quite a step up from the RCOS I was using back then.
Extremely rigid 100 mm diameter instrument rings, 90mm diameter field corrector, even more rigid OTA and effectively perfect optics delivers some amazing data.
Not sure whether I'll pull the trigger on a large format sCMOS camera just yet. SBIG's AC4040 looks very seductive as does the QHY600.
I struggle with the low-level random fixed pattern noise in all CMOS sensors...something totally absent in CCD's which unfortunately are being phased out, not by engineers saying CMOS is better, but by bean counters.
Interesting times ahead !