decay wrote: ↑Sat Apr 30, 2022 7:10 pm
only 15 x 120s lights, ISO 800
flats, bias
That's a respectable Running Man, with good coloring and fantastic round stars. Is this a crop, or most of the dataset? If not mostly a crop, you have your guiding dialled in well by the looks of it and the field appears nice and flat.
Did you use SVDecon at all? It may be able to bring out some more detail and tighten stars even more, particularly in M43/M42.
This was a long way for me, I started some years ago with the toy grade scope (60/700) of my daughter. One fine summer evening I saw the ring of Saturn (I will never forget that moment!) and some weeks later I modified a webcam and my journey into astrophotography began …
I started pretty much the same way with the modified webcam
@Ivo: Thank you for sharing this fine software. Somewhere in the internet I read, that ST would be “the masterpiece of a genius” and I can only agree. I am working in software development for many years and I have a quite strong background in mathematics and natural science as well, but this is really outstanding.
I don't know about masterpiece/genius
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, but ST is a definitely a deliberate and much needed re-think of astronomical signal processing. It came about by precisely walking the same path you describe above for yourself, and fundamentally trying to understand what is happening, at every step of the way, to the signal as it made its way to my - then - webcam and beyond.
Wipe was the first module I wrote, so I could remove light pollution. It was immediately obvious to me that manual sample setting I saw in PI (DBE) was a very naive and subjective way of approaching the problem, and a better, more objective way would be to have an
algorithm separate background/gradient from detail.
As they say, necessity is the mother of invention; the more I looked for software solutions to my AP problems, the more disappointed I got with the state of things, so I wrote more and more modules, and it all snowballed from there.
Signal evolution Tracking was the culmination of this effort, making ST more than just the sum of its modules.
And I really like this group of nerdy people on this ST forum (
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hopefully no one feels offended, sorry!) spread all over the world doing these crazy things!
AP'ers are probably the most generous, considered, modest and intelligent people I know. Personally, I've found AP and astronomy not only intellectually rewarding (the learning and discoveries never stop!), but also good for my mental health. Staring at things that are vastly bigger than my little world, things that were there long before I was born, and will be there long after I'm gone, makes my troubles feel insignificant. I hope this too is indeed universal amongst AP'ers.
Clear skies!