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  #81  
Old 02-02-2009, 08:32 PM
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My suggestion with the alp Gru image is to perform a 2 line calibration making the first line the star image at 0. Then pick that deep line and call it Ha, Hb or Hg at 6563,4861, 4340.
Then overlay a b5 spectra and see which one lines up with the iter lines the best. You should have absorptions at 6869 for O2 and 7605 for H2O as well.
If the first one doesn't work then call it Hb etc until it seems right. I think it is likely to be Hg at 4340.
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  #82  
Old 02-02-2009, 10:07 PM
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I think the results we're seeing are great!
Who would have thought that a bunch of amateurs with a small transmission grating costing less that an eyepiece could do so much.
I think we owe Robin Leadbeater a round of congratulations!! - you've been vindicated.
For those who don't know about him, Robin is a dedicated amateur from NW England who championed the idea of commercialising the Star Analyser grating with Paton-Hawksley. I'm sure if it wasn't for his strenuous efforts the SA would not have become a reality.
Keep up the good work!
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  #83  
Old 02-02-2009, 10:15 PM
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renormalised (Carl)
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Smile

I'd say he would be feeling chuffed, and we're all eternally grateful
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  #84  
Old 02-02-2009, 11:07 PM
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There are any number of ways you can use the SA. Check out the performance of any filters you may have! Put a filter in front of the SA, check out the before and after shots, how good is that sky glow filter?...
Measure the spectra of street lights, a backyard bug zapper (not much to see, mainly in the UV)!
Make a holder, put it in front of a std lens on a 350D DSLR and you can measure star spectra with 6 secs non tracked exposures...
I've used a 135mm lens + a 2x teleconverter and achieved approx 2.5 ang/px. Measure the sun spectra by using a reflection of a needle or polished ball bearing...

cheers
Mark
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  #85  
Old 02-02-2009, 11:48 PM
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Smile

CD or DVD are just as good....basically diffraction gratings with music or movies
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  #86  
Old 03-02-2009, 02:19 AM
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Jeff,
According to VSpec, Alpha Grus is a B7iv.
If I work on your spectra, the deepest absorption feature appears to be Hbeta, this then gives the series of Hgama, delta, epsilon towards the UV.
The "dip" around the 4500A, between Hbeta/Hgama I think may be a CIII feature(?) This calibration then shows the slight dip of Ha.
What do the others think???
If we agree, it would be good to post a data file with the graph(s); this allows others to run the actual spectra through VSpec.....what do you think??
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  #87  
Old 03-02-2009, 05:38 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Merlin66 View Post
Jeff,
According to VSpec, Alpha Grus is a B7iv.
If I work on your spectra, the deepest absorption feature appears to be Hbeta,......
If we agree, it would be good to post a data file with the graph(s); this allows others to run the actual spectra through VSpec.....what do you think??
Great idea. I'll have a go.
I have hopefully attached a zipped file containing two data files from VSpec.
One has the uncalibrated spec. the other calibrated with H-Beta as the deep dip in spectra. Both are of Aph Grus.

Others are welcome to view and decipher.
Please let me know what you find.
Attached Files
File Type: zip alp grus B-Hy.zip (6.5 KB, 9 views)
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  #88  
Old 04-02-2009, 11:00 AM
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Theodog,
I tried for a couple of hours to get your spectra to register with a reference B6v spectra; then played with H emission data.....
I wasn't able to get a good match. Even with, what I still think are H beta, H gama etc absorption features I can't seem to get a good scale to give them an acceptable registration.....
Hmmmm. Let me sleep on it.
Anyone else have any success??
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  #89  
Old 04-02-2009, 11:08 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Merlin66 View Post
Theodog,
I tried for a couple of hours to get your spectra to register with a reference B6v spectra; then played with H emission data.....
I wasn't able to get a good match. Even with, what I still think are H beta, H gama etc absorption features I can't seem to get a good scale to give them an acceptable registration.....
Hmmmm. Let me sleep on it.
Anyone else have any success??
I had a quick play and had the same problem.
May I suggest taking an image of beta Car (Miaplacidus) that is an A2 star that has easier absorption lines to identify. It is the only bright star between the false cross and the SCP so is easy to find. This will then give the A/pixel for your set up and from that the other spectra can be calibrated.
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  #90  
Old 04-02-2009, 01:20 PM
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Will try beta Car tonight, failing storms again.
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  #91  
Old 04-02-2009, 02:53 PM
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I had a quick try at them as well. Didn't go too well either.

I found a spectra of alpha grus I took some time ago, and it seems the deep absorption line is H beta (4830A if I remember). I do recall sort of giving up trying to process the spectra as it seemed "a bit odd".

I am happy to be proven wrong, but I always thought ccd's couldn't capture UV wavelengths.

cheers
Mark
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  #92  
Old 04-02-2009, 09:49 PM
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Hi All,
Beta Carinae Spec.
Due to poor weather it is only one exposure of 3 seconds, possibly with cloud.
This set-up is different to other s taken, but hopefully is the final set-up.
Looks strange to me.
Dark subtracted but no flat or bias.
12" f5 scope.
Attached Files
File Type: zip Bta Car Spec.zip (2.2 KB, 9 views)

Last edited by theodog; 04-02-2009 at 10:05 PM. Reason: more info
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  #93  
Old 05-02-2009, 09:37 AM
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OK
I'll have a look at it tonight.
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  #94  
Old 05-02-2009, 09:33 PM
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Hi All,
Firstly must apologise. My last B Car WAS rubbish.

Tonight I obtained much better data.

15x 3sec darks & Bias.
Attached Thumbnails
Click for full-size image (Bta Car Spec5-2-09.JPG)
31.1 KB20 views
Attached Files
File Type: zip bta car spec5-2-09.zip (2.8 KB, 9 views)
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  #95  
Old 06-02-2009, 12:00 AM
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I think I have worked it out. The camera is pretty insensitive in the blue.
See the attached image.
I have attached an image I took of Beta Car with the shutter open. This produced long streaks that highlight the hydrogen absorption lines.
Attached Thumbnails
Click for full-size image (bta car spec5-2-09 copy.jpg)
124.3 KB17 views
Click for full-size image (betacarstreaks.jpg)
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Click for full-size image (betacarsp.jpg)
78.1 KB17 views
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  #96  
Old 06-02-2009, 06:27 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry B View Post
I think I have worked it out. The camera is pretty insensitive in the blue.
Now that is supprising. I will spec some other stars to check this out. It was the ST7e.

Thanks Terry. I now have some idea how to process the spectra.

Is the 3rd image straight from your camera or have you processed the .spc info in some way?
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  #97  
Old 06-02-2009, 09:09 PM
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Good analysis!

Good analysis Terry!
An extraordinary outcome; 24.1 A/pixel is pretty low resolution even for a SA grating... the distance to the chip could be increased i.e. almost doubled. The severe drop off in the blue-UV is not unusual, but the deep absorption threw me- it just looked to much like a H beta point! Moral of the story? - the info's in the spectra - somewhere!
Looks like Terry's curve has at least been corrected for CCD response and fitted to the Planck curve. ( Tutorial #5)
I've got to ask... Jeff - what was the issue with your first betcar spectra?
Are you doing some pre-processing??
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  #98  
Old 06-02-2009, 09:47 PM
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Quote:
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I've got to ask... Jeff - what was the issue with your first betcar spectra?
I just thought I'd have another go at it. When I did the lines seemed much better defined.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Merlin66 View Post
Are you doing some pre-processing??
No, no preprocessing except for dark and bias. I'm flat-out getting my head around just displaying the graph with scale.

I agree with the distance to CCD/scale problem 'though. I have my grating practically at the front of the ST in a filter wheel. I will have to move the mirror forward to allow for further seperation due to focus issues.

I do appreciate the help everyone has supplied so far, its been great. At the moment I sit here in 30+ temps trying to better my data.
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  #99  
Old 06-02-2009, 09:54 PM
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theodog (Jeff)
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Looks like Terry's curve has at least been corrected for CCD response and fitted to the Planck curve. ( Tutorial #5)
???????
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  #100  
Old 06-02-2009, 10:30 PM
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The shape of the spectral curve indicates that the camera/ CCD responce curve has been calculated and the spectra corrected. Knowing the spectral "shape" of a reference star, you can also correct the curve to match the Planck temperature curve. This is pretty well covered in VSpec's #5 tutorial which you should download. There are 10 tutorials in all.
Hope this helps.
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