ICEINSPACE
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Waxing Gibbous 91.7%
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13-11-2009, 03:04 PM
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Location: Adelaide
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LHaRGB of Tarantula
Last night I drove down to the observatory and removed the flattener, recollimated (it needs more work) and imaged the Tarantula Nebula in LHaRGB. It needs a bit more time as I got 70, 70 45, 40 40 minutes worth per channel.
I am happy with the star colours but not all the shapes are to my liking. Guiding was good as I went back to using the guide scope for the interim, in the subs there was no evidentary problem with flexure, just what looks like a collimation issue near the bottom third of the image.
Not sure about this blend as I just stacked the Ha and red separately as they were both different binning and then I summed them both to get my Ha R blend. The colour was initially over powering but I did some curves adjustments to get this colouring.
More data needed but I am much happier with this data set than my efforts on NGC1365.
Click Here for image
Feel free to comment.
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13-11-2009, 03:15 PM
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Lovely work Paul. In fact, I'd say its the best image you've produced with this instrument. Stars resolve remarkably well and as you say, they've got good colour to them. The Ha blend works. The neb itself isn't a pure Ha red anyway given the high OIII in the area. You should be pretty happy with this effort. Not a huge amount of data, but a rewarding imaging has been the result. Well done.
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13-11-2009, 03:18 PM
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Thanks Jase coming from you that means an aweful lot. I will try to get more data on it in the next week. No rest for the wicked.
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13-11-2009, 03:27 PM
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Newtonian power! Love it!
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Mandurah
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blinder of a shot, vibrant reds, and nice stars.! congrats seems your hard work and patience is paying off
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13-11-2009, 03:39 PM
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Thanks Brendan, as they say only good things come from hard work. I have to say it again, this monochrome DSO imaging is harder than I thought but I must say seeing a nice Ha come out of the camera is pretty special late at night. More to learn and everything to master yet. must not rest on my laurels. 
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13-11-2009, 03:45 PM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
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Yeah very nice and sharp. Top shot.
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13-11-2009, 03:53 PM
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Widefield wuss
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Location: Caboolture, Australia
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I'd be really happy with that!
Looks great Paul, the colour, the stars seem very well resolved, that 0.7" per pixel resolution is really showing itself there!
The only issue is that tilt at the imaging plane.. What does CCDIS say about it? collimation or tilt or a bit of both?
Not withstanding that, it looks great!
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13-11-2009, 03:58 PM
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Alex, it says collimation, very little tilt or tip; those numbers are in the decimal area. Getting the collimation right is a pain. Yes the oversampling does help and seeing was quite good down at the house last night. In fact there is a run of it for the next couple of day. High pressure with very little jet stream over head. That usually makes for nice seeing, but it does get very dewy though. Primary and secondary got dewed up again last night.
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13-11-2009, 04:44 PM
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Widefield wuss
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Location: Caboolture, Australia
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Heaters Paul.. Heaters... I'd wrap a heater around the secondary baffle, yes it will create a little turbulence in the optical path, but lets face it, people take stunning images with RCOS scopes, they have a heater built into the secondary.. As for the primary, if you added a dew shield as well, you could safely assume that the heat rising out of the dew shield would stop the ingress of dew on to the primary... Failing that, perhaps fans? Not that you particularly want to be pulling it all apart again...
Yeah.. I really fluked the collimation on my one when I had it.. took all of 5 minutes, did it all by eye and the shots came out razor sharp...
In any case, you have to be pretty damn close to capture the detail you have in this shot.
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13-11-2009, 04:50 PM
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Newtonian power! Love it!
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Join Date: Jul 2008
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its a bit like that, i remember doing my helix shot (althogh not a great shot) but it had round stars on 10 min subs.  i was over the new moon about it!
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13-11-2009, 04:57 PM
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Using a dew shield now, so that does not work so well.
I did try using a dew heater wrapped around the secondary but it did terrible things to my stars. If you remember my image of 4945?
Like you said the collimaition is very close, just a smidge out really but enough to be a pain. It will get worked out eventually. I have jagged the collimation a couple of times now. When I did eagle and 5128 it was sweet but with the QSI on the back it tends to make it a little harder. No live view to work with, which is not great.
I am pondering upon what I will do with the dew problems. The heater really needs to be inside the assembly and that could be problematic given how fussy the rotational alignment is with these scopes.
More to work on though.
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13-11-2009, 06:19 PM
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Widefield wuss
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Join Date: Mar 2008
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Yeah your collimation was brilliant with your Eta Carinae, M16 and 5128..
Do you have the option of downloading a subframe on the QSI583? If you download a small sub frame, maybe 50x50px, your download speed should be quick enough to use it for collimation... Otherwise you could perform collimation using the QHY5... you can take .2sec subs.. just use a fairly bright star at say, mag 4 and that should easily provide enough speed to adjust collimation at near enough to real time...
That dew problem sounds like a real bummer... I remember telling you I'd had issues with the secondary fogging up and you'd not seen it... I thought the heater was the best option to solve it, although I do remember your 4945 shot having some weird star action going on... Maybe fans in the rear cell would do the trick, but as you say, the rotational alignment is critical and I wouldn't want to risk doing anything silly...
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13-11-2009, 11:39 PM
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I'd be happy with that
nice one Paul
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14-11-2009, 08:45 AM
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Aye, T'is a lovely shot Paul, as we have come to expect from you. The corners suffering slightly? Being picky I know.
What is the dew issue? Is it the secondary? If so, perhaps look at a specific dew heater, like I got from the SDM man, it goes inside the secondary holder and just has a wire protruding.
Gary
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14-11-2009, 09:00 AM
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Looks real good Paul. Detail,detail, detail. I think I miss the focal length you have in this scope.
Well done.
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14-11-2009, 09:57 PM
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You're on a roll Paul.
Very nice.
Now for some serious exposure time.
Greg.
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14-11-2009, 11:36 PM
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Yes Paul, Can get lost in the detail! Stunning.
Darren
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14-11-2009, 11:41 PM
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Narrowfield rules!
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A good effort Paul, but. This is a difficult one to not look messy, more to do with processing than capture. Just IMO, uniqely, Trant sometimes presents better with less overwhelming star action, and less neb extention to preserve the 3d effect the narly bits can provide. Its an artistc interpretation of course, your rendition is natural, but to stand out, sometimes extra thought on processing is handy.
A Sid in this regard, as a second choice might be interesting?
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14-11-2009, 11:54 PM
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Widefield wuss
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Join Date: Mar 2008
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Agreed... If you upped the strength of the Ha in the data it should dull out the stars a bit and you could numb down the stars and bring in more of the sharp detail that Ha provides... You could be ultra daring, and remove the stars all together  Dare to be different!
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15-11-2009, 10:44 AM
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Highest Observatory in Oz
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: Canberra
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Excellent Paul
You are improving at a rate of knotts with that new setup
If you are after contructive critique the only thing I would say is it does look a bit monochromatic...?..not sure why but could be due to the ha blending  . The sharpening looks to get noticably stronger towards the centre and imparts a flattened look to the image but this is perhaps just the undercorrected optics..?
Only minor feedback above though, this is great work.
Mike
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