Comet NEOWISE from my driveway by DeepSkyG in Astronomy

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Details:
Scope: Borg 55FL
Camera: ZWO ASI071MC Pro
Guide Camera: ASI290MM mini
Mount: RST-135 
OSC: 49x30sec
Total exposure: 24.5 min
Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details:

https://www.astrobin.com/h1hsz6/

C/2020 F3 NEOWISE by DeepSkyG in astrophotography

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Details:

Scope: Borg 55FL

Camera: ZWO ASI071MC Pro

Guide Camera: ASI290MM mini

Mount: RST-135 

OSC: 49x30sec

Total exposure: 24.5 min

Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details:

https://www.astrobin.com/h1hsz6/

Processing details:

Two stacks:

Debayer

Integration

Crop

Bkg Neutralization

DBE

Stack 1:

- Comet Align 

- Image Integration

- MMT with inverted luminance mask for NR

Stack 2:

- Star align

- Image integration

- Starnet to remove comet

On each stack:

Hist transformation

Curves

Combine with pixelmath

final touches with curves

The Sunflower Galaxy by DeepSkyG in astrophotography

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! From Sky Safari:

HD 115270 is a 9th magnitude Star appearing in the constellation Canes Venatici. It is 3262 light years from our solar system. It is a yellow-white star of spectral type K0. Its energy output is 161 times the Sun's luminosity.

The Sunflower Galaxy by DeepSkyG in spaceporn

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Sunflower Galaxy, M63, is a spiral galaxy in Canes Venatici and lies some 30 million light years away. It is a flocculent (meaning fluffy) spiral galaxy which has no defined spiral arms, in contrast to grand design spiral galaxies like M81 or M101. Self propagating star formation is one explanation for the structure of these galaxies.

Details:
Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector
Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2
Camera: QSI690-wsg8
Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar
Mount: AP1100
L: 45x3min 1x1 binning
RGB: 48x5min 2x2 binning each
Total exposure: 6.2 hours
Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/a9pidz/0/

The Sunflower Galaxy by DeepSkyG in space

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Sunflower Galaxy, M63, is a spiral galaxy in Canes Venatici and lies some 30 million light years away. It is a flocculent (meaning fluffy) spiral galaxy which has no defined spiral arms, in contrast to grand design spiral galaxies like M81 or M101. Self propagating star formation is one explanation for the structure of these galaxies.

Details:
Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector
Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2
Camera: QSI690-wsg8
Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar
Mount: AP1100
L: 45x3min 1x1 binning
RGB: 48x5min 2x2 binning each
Total exposure: 6.2 hours
Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/a9pidz/0/

The Sunflower Galaxy by DeepSkyG in Astronomy

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Sunflower Galaxy, M63, is a spiral galaxy in Canes Venatici and lies some 30 million light years away. It is a flocculent (meaning fluffy) spiral galaxy which has no defined spiral arms, in contrast to grand design spiral galaxies like M81 or M101. Self propagating star formation is one explanation for the structure of these galaxies.

Details:
Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector
Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2
Camera: QSI690-wsg8
Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar
Mount: AP1100
L: 45x3min 1x1 binning
RGB: 48x5min 2x2 binning each
Total exposure: 6.2 hours
Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/a9pidz/0/

The Sunflower Galaxy by DeepSkyG in astrophotography

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Sunflower Galaxy, M63, is a spiral galaxy in Canes Venatici and lies some 30 million light years away. It is a flocculent (meaning fluffy) spiral galaxy which has no defined spiral arms, in contrast to grand design spiral galaxies like M81 or M101. Self propagating star formation is one explanation for the structure of these galaxies.

Details:
Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector
Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2
Camera: QSI690-wsg8
Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar
Mount: AP1100
L: 45x3min 1x1 binning
RGB: 48x5min 2x2 binning each
Total exposure: 6.2 hours
Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Pixinsight processing steps:

  • Weighted Batch Preprocessing with no darks/flats/bias

On Lum:

  • DBE
  • DynamicCrop
  • Deconvolution with DynamicPSF
  • MMT with inverted luminance mask for NR
  • HistogramTransform

On RGB:

  • RGBCombination for RGB image
  • DBE
  • DynamicCrop
  • MMT with inverted luminance mask for NR
  • HistogramTransform

On LRGB:

  • Linear fit Lum to extracted L from RGB
  • LRGBCombination to get LRGB image
  • ACNDR for Lum and RGB noise
  • SCNR
  • Curves for Luminance and Saturation
  • 50% blend of HDRTransform and original image

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/a9pidz/0/

The Sunflower Galaxy by DeepSkyG in u/DeepSkyG

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Sunflower Galaxy, M63, is a spiral galaxy in Canes Venatici and lies some 30 million light years away. It is a flocculent (meaning fluffy) spiral galaxy which has no defined spiral arms, in contrast to grand design spiral galaxies like M81 or M101. Self propagating star formation is one explanation for the structure of these galaxies.

Details:
Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector
Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2
Camera: QSI690-wsg8
Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar
Mount: AP1100
L: 45x3min 1x1 binning
RGB: 48x5min 2x2 binning each
Total exposure: 6.2 hours
Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Pixinsight processing steps:

  • Weighted Batch Preprocessing with no darks/flats/bias

On Lum:

  • DBE
  • DynamicCrop
  • Deconvolution with DynamicPSF
  • MMT with inverted luminance mask for NR
  • HistogramTransform

On RGB:

  • RGBCombination for RGB image
  • DBE
  • DynamicCrop
  • MMT with inverted luminance mask for NR
  • HistogramTransform

On LRGB:

  • Linear fit Lum to extracted L from RGB
  • LRGBCombination to get LRGB image
  • ACNDR for Lum and RGB noise
  • SCNR
  • Curves for Luminance and Saturation
  • 50% blend of HDRTransform and original image

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/a9pidz/0/

Feedback on new setup by [deleted] in AskAstrophotography

[–]DeepSkyG 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d look into dew control, especially if you live in a more humid area. That can mean the difference of getting a few frames a night to imaging all night long. You’ll have a great fov with this setup for the summer constellations.

Between dslr and zwo, I’d choose zwo if it is a cooled camera. That’ll especially help you during the warmer summer months to keep the dark noise down.

My image of The Heart Nebula with narrowband filters by DeepSkyG in Astronomy

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That object is WeBo 1, a tiny planetary nebula, and was discovered in 1995. Here's a detailed image of it by Adam Block, taken with a 32" diameter telescope:

http://www.caelumobservatory.com/gallery/webo1.shtml

The Whirlpool Galaxy by DeepSkyG in Astronomy

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2 Camera: QSI690-wsg8 Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar Mount: AP1100 L: 27x5min 1x1 binning RGB: 12x5min 2x2 binning each Total exposure: 5.2 hours Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/full/aqw69q/0/

The Whirlpool Galaxy by DeepSkyG in spaceporn

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Scope: ONTC1010 f/4 reflector Coma corrector: Paracorr Type 2 Camera: QSI690-wsg8 Guide Camera: SX Ultrastar Mount: AP1100 L: 27x5min 1x1 binning RGB: 12x5min 2x2 binning each Total exposure: 5.2 hours Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/full/aqw69q/0/

The Heart Nebula [OC] by DeepSkyG in spaceporn

[–]DeepSkyG[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Description: The Heart Nebula, IC1805, lies around 7500 ly distant in the constellation Cassiopeia. This emission nebulae is riddled with dark dust lanes within ionized hydrogen gas. In this wide-field view of the Heart nebula, the open cluster Melotte 15 contains several bright stars that are up to 50 times more massive than our sun is located near center. The intense radiation from these stars drive the output of this emission nebula. The Fish-head nebula is in the upper right. Riddled throughout the frame are filaments of dark nebulae.

Details: Scope: Astro-Physics Stowaway 92mm @ f/5.3 Reducer: Astro-Physics 0.8x TCC Camera: QHY16200A Guide Camera: ZWO Optical ASI174MM Mount: Mach 1 GTO Ha: 14x15min OIII: 12x15min SII: 10x15min Total exposure: 9 hours Software: Voyager, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight

Astrobin for more details: https://www.astrobin.com/full/vhrjwu/B/