Sunday, December 24, 2017

24 December 2017

Tried the Orion Bahtinov Focuser today, and I love it... more on that later

Imaged M33 using the QHY5III174M camera with the Orion 80mm f/5 scope and the Star Adventurer mount.


This is a two-minute capture, no filters, just a single monochrome image.

The three-minute capture was too saturated to provide much hope in the available sky-glow.

Tried capturing images using SharpCap 3.0 as well... Looks like a very promising technique, will develop that capability next time.


Also, a single attempt to image of M45 on my friend's 12" dobsonian...


Will work on the images, and edit this post if I can improve on this quick processing.

Saturday, December 23, 2017

ISS Lunar Transit
On 20 Dec 17, the International Space Station transited the waxing crescent moon shortly after sunset, from the point of view of north-western Louisiana.  I found this from the very-handy ISS Transit Finder web app:
https://transit-finder.com/

The interface is very easy and the output makes it simple to optimize your selected location within the transit corridor.  Here's a re-calculated map for that transit...



Interestingly, it has changed by a couple miles today, versus the calculation I did prior to the actual transit.  I don't know if the orbital elements changed since Wednesday or the back-calculation introduces some error...

I used the Orion 80mm (f/5) scope and the QHY5III174M camera again.  Here's the video of the transit, at 10% speed, plus a few zoom-ins and a 4% speed playback:



Thanks to the professionals at Camp Minden and in particular, SFC Jowers for the support at the location.

Since this worked, I'll next plan for a solar transit as well as another with the big scope.


Sunday, December 17, 2017

Northern Lights

My wife and I decided to travel the coast of Norway back in 2011 to view the aurora.  As March and October appeared to be the best months to view them, we chose March for a cruise on the Hurtigruten Ferry line from Kirkenes near the northern border southwestward to Bergen.  Six days and five nights aboard the MS Trollfjord visiting about 23 ports along the beautiful Norwegian coast provided us with a very memorable vacation.

We had armed ourselves with a Canon 16-35mm II f/2.8 L-series lens for our Canon 5D mark II and hoped the weather (terrestrial and space) would provide some opportunities, unlike the sailing immediately prior to ours which had been socked in with clouds the whole time.

Sure enough, dinner on the first night of the sailing was interrupted by the Captain announcing the presence of the aurora.

This kicked-off five nights of more and more auroral activity, which we did our best to capture on the usually-moving large ferry.  Varying the exposure lengths and taking as many as we could while docked at ferry ports produced some images I'm kinda proud of, but the next time we will definitely try to have opportunities by land to improve the chances of crisp image.



Also, here's an interview I did with KTBS on the aurora...

https://www.ktbs.com/news/arklatex-indepth/northern-lights/article_75208998-c11b-11e7-a182-b3aaac7c7335.html


Thursday, November 30, 2017

Well, it's been a few years, but...

On 23 November 2017 I set out to capture M31 (Andromeda Galaxy) using my latest rig.

Here's a photo of the rig...  It consists of a SkyWatcher Star Adventurer tracking mount head on a SkyWatcher wedge, supported by a Velbon tripod.  The scope is an 80mm Orion short-tube (f/5) 400mm focal length which I'd gotten as a guide scope for the 12" LX-200.

The camera shown is a Canon 5D Mark II, however I really only used that camera to course-aim the scope.  For imaging, I used a QHY5III174 Monochrome camera... For that camera, I used an Orion extender tube to enable focusing.


Here's a processed image from the evening...


To get to this image, I first captured a 120 second exposure with the QHY, controlled as an ASCOM camera with TheSkyX.  The program saves images in FIT format... To further process I used FITS Liberator to re-save as a TIF file (both as Windows applications in Parallels), then worked levels and histogram scaling with PixInsight (Mac Version).  I also used PixInsight to export the images to PNG format for sharing.

Out of curiosity, I examined the image to see what objects I could identify...  Below are a few Globular Clusters orbiting M31 which can be found on the image.  I used Sky Safari to identify those, and marked them up on the exported PNG image using the MacOS Preview editor function.


Waiting for another clear night (probably following the full moon) for another deep-sky imaging night.

Mark J.