I had an opportunity to experience Eclipse, it's definitely breathtaking event. However all my plans were thwarted by clouds, on a positive side, though we saw few things. It all started with me, forgetting intervalometer since I typically use small computer to manage session and it sat in the box, but because of clouds I decided not to go back and just enjoy the show. Though I was able to take few shots and I can call it success. One has more of a corona and another prominence.
@Angerman awesome, thanks for explaining.
@Angerman I am planning on trying PI soon, I believe there are some tools as well, thanks for suggestion.
@Angerman what did you use for post? PI?
Here is my progress on latest #astrophotography project. I've done 2 panels 4h on Horse Head and 3h on Orion Nebula. Processed with #siril and stitched in #gimp. Problems, overexposed Orion Nebula, I need to shorten my exposures, then add more data on Horse Head and pick something else for stitching, something with more precise star alignment, thinking about ASTAP. #astropic
3 months until the total solar eclipse in North America! Do you have your solar eclipse glasses yet?
I made this video a while ago reviewing 4 AAS Certified glasses. It's pretty thorough with included pictures. 🔭🧪
200 minutes of integration and a quick stack and stretch in Siril later and I think this new setup is a winner. I didn’t realize the other nebulas were so close, so reframed a bit before shooting the set.
#astrophotography
I've always been fascinated with Orion constellation, it's definitely my favorite. I remember last year when I was shooting Orion using my trusty Canon and saw a glimpse of Horse Head Nebula I was excited. It was not much even though I shot for hours. Fast forward year, here is about 1 hour shot through L-Enhance using astrocamera. You can clearly see all. It's start of a new project mosaic 4 or 6 panels, 6 hours each, I am not sure how to do it, so I am learning. #astropic
I've learned that 4 hours is a really weird spot, essentially it's really close to 2 hours in terms of the data I get, maybe less noisier, but I typically need at least 6 hours to get visible improvements comparing to 2 hours of data. Here is M45 aka Pleiades with 4 hours. #astropic #astrophotography
We finally had some break in clouds and I was able to spend goo amount of time my target. However I picked wrong one because that nebula has emission and reflection pieces and I was shooting through a filter, that cut reflection part. This is Flaming Star Nebula 1500 light years away from Earth along with Letter Y Star Cluster, Spider Nebula and Fly Nebula. Really quick processing. #astropic
Unscrew 4 screws to get access. I think problem with it that they placed resistor which is too much for that battery and rest of the circuit, that what makes diode underneath this glass too dim(see red circle for resistor). What we need to do is to by pass it, see one of the blue lines, either one would work. My soldering skills aren't that great so I just soldered over resistor. WARNING it will void your warranty, do it at your own risk. That worked for me. Final result is in the picture.
Since I had no chance to see Geminids meteor shower due to clouds, I've decided to improve my polar scope illuminator. If you bought Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer 2i star tracker, pro package comes with polar scope illuminator which is too dim, at least for my Bortle 7 area it's absolutely useless. Someone may say it's just bad unit, but trust me there are lot's of ppl having the same problem, so it's probably flawed design. #astrophotography Here how it looks and solution below:
@naz Lucky you, sounds like you had lot's of fun, we had lot's of clouds and that's all I saw. But well said, indeed, nothing beats seeing meteors with your own eyes.
I call it project of learning, just for the fun I've decided to fully utilize my new gear. First night my focus shifted, then I've realized I forgot to turn on cooling, then I've spent time learning how to guide. Now I am guiding, focused using HFR tool in Ekos/Kstars, but I am suspecting that SWSA running out of batteries. It's been fun, here is 4h of leftovers(about 50%) on NGC281 aka PacMan #astropic
We had Moon's halo a couple days ago, it's an incredible and breathtaking experience. I chose to enjoy it rather than set up my gear to take a picture, however I took a photo with my phone, quality is meh, Moon is overexposed, but you get an idea. So it's more like a historical evidence.
22° halo - Wikipedia
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/22%C2%B0_halo
First light with a new toy. Real astrocamera ASI 533MC Pro, it's way ahead of my old trusted Canon. I am still learning and building my workflow with it. I've setup yesterday to workout focusing with it, it's way harder since you view your picture through VNC screen :D. Here is first light, Orion Nebula and glimpse of Horse Head Nebula, just 15 min of integration, no calibration frames no framing, quick processing, but I love it. #astropic