I was going thru my astrophotography archives and found my first good shot of the moon. Taken on March 11, 2015, thru a 6” Celetron Nexstar and a Nikon 3200
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Caio Camargo's blog
The Sun is Eclipsed by the Moon
Today on August 21ˢᵗ, 2017 North America saw a beautiful and rare sight, a total solar eclipse. This beautiful syzygy, this cosmic ballet, gave me the opportunity to try something interesting. With a bit of DIY and help from my beloved I managed to snap this shot from near totality here in South Ajax.
I wanted to share this moment with those who could for one reason or another, be it geographical or meteorological or due to prior duties, were unable to share in this amazing moment.
The Jewel of the Solar System
Just a quick post of a Photo of Saturn taken on February 26, 2016. A 629 frames HD video was taken with a Nikon D3200 attached to a Celestron 6SE Nextar, stabilized and the best 29 frames, were stacked and processed to give the resulting image:
Vega & Schedar - Stellar Photography
These are a couple of years old now but I noticed it has been a while since I posted anything. Took these on August 2015. Both were taken with a Nikon 3200 attached to a 6" Celestron Nextar 6SE. The first photograph is a stack of 19 x 10 second exposures of the star Schedar (α Cassiopeiæ) is a orange giant star about 230 light years away. It's 4-5 times more massive than the Sun and 42 times as big! (-Wiki-)
The second photograph is a single 15 second exposure of the star Vega (α Lyræ) only 25 light years away . It's just over 2 times the size of the Sun both in terms of mass and radius. Notably Vega was the North Polar Star about 12,000 years ago. (-Wiki-)
By Jove!
Last night the Snow Moon shone brightly in the cold winter skies of Southern Ontario. She, however, was not alone. Roughly 11 degrees to the east, the King of the Planets closed in on his chase. I took advantage of the wonderfully clear skies and set up my 6" Celestron Nexstar and my trusted Nikon D3200 out for a spin. I was also not alone. I also took the opportunity to share this wonderful experience with my beloved thru the magic of Skype. I set up a screen share as I imaged the Moon and Jupiter, giving her essentially a live astrowebcam to the heavens. For the first time I managed to capture a clear picture of Jupiter and it four Galilean moons (from top to bottom - Europa, Io, Callisto and Ganymede)!
Tonight, Jupiter will join the Moon in a beautiful conjunction in the night sky. Look south roughly at midnight and if you are lucky enough to have clear skies you will witness a beautiful pairing, the Moon and Jupiter will be only about 3 degrees apart just below the constellation Leo! (SkyMap)
2015 Perseid Meteor Shower
On the Night between August 12-13 2013 me and my father ventured out to Mt. Horeb, ON near Omemee to witness this year's stellar Perseid meteor shower. The night started out with a few clouds, but at around 2:30am the clouds all dissipated as the shower's radiant near zenith and the showered peaked. WOW, what a sight, from faint little shooting stars to several fireballs, This years' shower did not disappoint. At one point we were seeing about one shooting star every 20 or so seconds. According to the International Meteor Organization, the rate was about 85 meteors per hour during the shower's peak.
Milky Way over Rochester, NY
Milky Way over Lake Ontario
Last night I decided to go for a walk before going to bed. Naturally I brought my camera along to take some pictures of the night sky over the lake. Even with the heavy haze and light pollution from both The Golden Horseshoe and Rochester,NY, I got some pleasing results.
Settings and Processing: 18mm f3.5 3min45sec total stacked from 15x 15sec at 1600ISO and 2 dark frames, stacked with DeepSkyStacker 3.3.2, processed in RawTherapee 4.2.238 and Gimp 2.8.
Lunar Splendor
Deneb
Last night the clouds broke and the sky cleared. This 6 minute exposure shows the star Deneb prominently on the left side of the image as well as some nice red coloured nebulosity and the rest of Cygnus to the right. Taken with my Nikon D3200 60x 6sec ISO6400 exposures at 55mm stacked in DeepSkyStacker and processed in Rawtherapee.
A quick comparison...
Below are a quick comparsion between the method used in my last post (first photo) and developing a single exposure (sencond photo).
As you can see the results are somewhat comparable, with one major difference. The first photo technique (using the stacking method) reduces the amount of noise in the image considerably.
Here is another example:
Amateur DSLR Astrophotography
I've decided to put up a quick tutorial on taking some nice pictures of the night sky in less than perfect light polluted conditions. The results won't be anything like some of those amazing shots obtained from dark sky sites but they will still provide some nice shots. Like this one:
Tools you will need:
- A camera on a sturdy surface (a DSLR on a tripod works best) that can shoot in RAW format (jpegs won't look as nice and are usually to noisy) and shutter speed can be set manually.
- A way to take a sequence of photos in a row (an Intervalometer of some sort)
- Deepskystacker
- Rawtherapee
- Gimp
Steps:
- Locate your target. In this case I aimed my camera at the the Milky Way around the constellation Cygnus.
- Take a couple of test exposures using the rule of 600 and the highest ISO that you can without getting too much noise (a small amount of noise is OK since the stacking will take care of it). Tip: focus on a faraway street lamp with the camera's auto-focus and turn it off, this will get you a focus onto infinity.
- In my case setting the focal length to 27mm and the f-stop to 5.6, ISO 1600 and 10s shutter and daytime white balance, yielded the following result:Not bad some of brightest stars can be seen and they are in focus!
- Set the camera to take a large numbers of exposures in a row (These are your Light Frames). Use an Intervalometer, or in my case I connect the camera via USB to my laptop (using digiCamControl) or my android phone (using qDSLRDashboard). In this case I set the camera for 30x 10sec exposures giving a total exposure of 5 minutes.
- Once the camera is done taking the photos take a few dark frames, by taking 3 shots with the SAME SETTINGS but put the cap back on.
- Finally take a bias shot by keeping the cap on and increasing the shutter speed to the highest your camera is capable of (usually 1/4000 or 1/8000)
- Both the Dark and Bias frames MUST be done at the time your Light Frames are taken
- Now upload the photos to a folder and launch DeepSkyStacker
- Click on Open Picture Files… and load your light frames
- Click on Dark Files… and load the dark frames
- Click on offset/bias files.. and load the bias frame
- Go to RAW/FITS DDP Settings and Check Auto White balance and OK
- Click on Check all
- Click on Register Checked pictures…
- The default setting are OK, you can later play with them or look at some other tutorials on how to tweak them.
- Hit the OK button, sit back and relax. Depending on your number on Pictures and hardware this could take quite a while, my case took around 35-40 minutes on a not to fast laptop. Your mileage will vary!
- When DeepSkyStacker finishes it will create this:Umm not much to see…
- Open the Autosave.tif in Rawtherapee
- Play with the sliders until you get something like this (a future tutorial will deal more with this in detail):
- Hurray, you are almost there. Save it as an 8 bit tiff.
- You probably notice the colour is not quite right and the edges are fuzzy. To fix this develop and save 3 of your best exposures from the set and load them on Gimp.
- Using the G'MIC plugin, blend the 3 photos as layers using the median option to get rid of the stars.
- load the saved 8bit tiff from above as a layer over this one and create a grey scale layer mask. (You may need to do some tweaking to the layer mask's contrast to get better results.
- That's it! You should get something close to this: