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Old 27-06-2007, 10:08 AM
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iceman (Mike)
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Exclamation Part 2: Make another Jupiter (raw frames included)

Hi all

In the continuing trend of collaborative processing tips and techniques, open sharing of information and ideas, I've uploaded some raw data from my my excellent Jupiter session on the 11th May.

Last time, I provided the raw stacked images which had some slight noise reduction already applied. This time, I've provided the raw stacked image - absolutely no wavelet processing, no noise reduction or any other processing.

For those that want an extra challenge, I've also uploaded zipped up files of the raw frames of each channel for you to process completely in Registax yourself (including align/optimise/stack) and produce the final image.

The raw stacked images can be downloaded here. Each file is a ~1meg TIF file. Right-click on the link and click "save target as" to save the file. Note: Your browser might try and rename the file to include a ".TIFF" extension instead of ".TIF". Make sure you rename it otherwise registax may have trouble opening the file.

- Stacked Red Channel
- Stacked Green Channel
- Stacked Blue Channel

As a suggestion for the less initiated, open each channel one at a time in Registax, and it will take you straight to the wavelets page where you can start the processing. They are saved from Registax v4 - you should be able to open them in Registax without any problem. If you have problems opening them in Registax, ensure they are saved as a ".TIF" extension.
To create the RGB colour image, you may need to convert them to greyscale first depending on your normal processing routine and the program(s) you use.


If you want the extra challenge of processing the raw frame data in Registax yourself, you can download the (large) files here. Each file is approx 180 meg zip file. Right-click on the link and click "save target as" to save the file. You will need to extract the zip (it will create a subdirectory) and then drag the bitmap files into Registax.

- Red Channel Raw Frames (180meg zip file)
- Green Channel Raw Frames (180meg zip file)
- Blue Channel Raw Frames (180meg zip file)

The raw frames were captured at 30fps (1/30s exposure) for 40 seconds each channel. The raw frames have been preprocessed using ppmcentre/ninox, which included ranking the frames (lower numbers are better quality) and cropping. No other processing has been done on the raw frames. I have zipped up the best 900 of the 1200 captured frames, just to make the zip file a little smaller.

As a suggestion for the less initiated, I use an alignment box of 128px and align on 2-4 points. My final stack usually includes 600 frames in very good seeing - obviously much less (half that or less) when the seeing is worse.

An (un-inforced) requirement is that you post your processing steps when you post your version of the image. This will help everyone (myself included) learn from your method of processing and be able to compare the results.

The aim of this project is to:
a) Enable others to learn from people's processing methods and steps
b) Up-skill the planetary imaging community so that everyone can produce better planetary images
c) Show how much of an art form image processing can be, and how personal taste plays a large factor in the final result
d) Show what raw data looks like when captured with the right techniques, using the right equipment in very good seeing.

This data was captured on the 11th May 2007 from my home on the Central Coast, NSW Australia with my 12" newt on an EQ6, using a DMK21AF04 monochrome webcam with a 5x powermate and Astronomik RGB filters. Jupiter was at an altitude of 61°. Seeing for the session was rated at a variable 6.5-8.5/10, with this avi data captured during the high end of that range.

Have fun, and I look forward to seeing the results!
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Old 27-06-2007, 03:58 PM
Ingo
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1. Auto Levels, auto contrast, auto color, unsharp mask, despeckle, sharpen, desaturated the chromatic abbreation, sharpened. Adobe Photoshop CS2.

I don't like this attempt, maybe I'll submit more.
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Old 02-07-2007, 04:12 AM
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joe_smith
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All done in photoshop RGB combine, auto colors, hi pass filter, dust and scratch remover. Plus the same one resized by 50% looks a lot better just wish the big one looked that sharp. The layout and eyecandy done with paint shop pro
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