Quote:
Originally Posted by astroron
Very impressive Steven 
Thanks for shareing 
Cheers 
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Thanks Ron.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stevec35
Nice catch Steven. Your skies must be pretty dark to do so well on such a faint object.
Cheers
Steve
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Hi Steve. Actually my skies are not very dark. I reckon a visual limiting magnitude of 5.5-6.0.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RickS
Congratulations on your perseverance. Great catch!
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Thanks for your comments Rick.
Quote:
Originally Posted by strongmanmike
Not bad Steve, 30hrs huh, certainly got something there I'd recon  ..but hmmm?..I am not sure what is the galaxy and what is vignetting  , the outer areas of the image do look very black like they are severely clipped and/or vignetting is playing havoc..? Leaving the entral area very bright.
Great project though
Mike
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Hello Mike,
Vignetting on a teeny ST-10XME chip?
It's the real thing. It's not called a dwarf spheroid for nothing.

Here is the AAO image, so stretched it makes the dwarf look like a globular.
http://spider.seds.org/spider/LG/car_dw.html
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
A fabulous effort and a great catch. There is something wrong with the way you processed the background. Its like you've done a subtract layer and its taken away the background where there are no stars. There are ways of processing out the background gradients without clipping it or removing actual background data.
Greg.
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Hi Greg.
The surface brightness of the galaxy is much fainter than the natural sky glow from the darkest sites on Earth. The only reason it can be imaged is due to the additive effects of surface brightness and sky glow.
The object is for all intents and purposes a variation of the sky background. To make it visible I had to subtract the sky glow from my site including any existing noise in the stacked image.
This allowed me to aggressively stretch the image and not lose it in the background.
I can make the background more natural looking by adding some noise to the background but I am satisfied with the way it turned out.
Regards
Steven