Originally Posted by
alpal http://www.iceinspace.com.au/vbiis/i...s/viewpost.gif
Quote:
Hi Mike,
what are the technical reasons why your image is better?
|
Mike,
Quote:
Better?..it's not better but rather has revealed the same or more of the faint galactic cirrus that's all. It wasn't that long ago that this stuff was considered out of range for amateur astroimagers. As Andy will surely testify however, the original raw plate fine details visible under the optical viewer he would have used must have been mind blowing, David just applied high contrast techniques to surface the very faint material....which we can do now too ...a very fast 12" astrograph, dark skies and a sensitive CCD camera helps too of course
|
Well that's right Mike,
The CCD cameras have a higher dynamic range than film
& by stacking we can get better signal to noise ratios.
The comparison would also depend on how the film image
was converted into digital - maybe with many losses -
as Andy seems to be reporting more detail from the original film plates.
It does however mean that we amateurs can do a lot of original work
to a standard that would have taken million of dollars of equipment in the 70s & 80s.
We are living in amazing times - a digital revolution.
I predict that amateurs will get hold of deformable secondary mirrors
for true adaptive optics in under 10 years time.
Just have a surf through this website:
http://www.alpao.com/?utm_source=ALP...m_medium=email
cheers
Allan