@Mike in Rancho
The two images are a comparison of an excerpt of Ufl's image (3 x 1.5 = 4.5h) and the corresponding area in Martin's 30h image.
There are
a lot of discrepancies.
When I look at an image, then what goes through my mind - granted, I'm not a typical viewer - is the following;
As said, I get suspicious right off the bat when stars are deformed in an atypical way. Stars are bloated and "swallow" each other.
Also puzzling, is that, what remains of the destroyed / white-clipped stellar profiles,
suggests acquisition through a cheap(er) DSLR lens that was stopped down slightly; there is a slight 6-spike pattern visible, typical of such a configuration (
see here for an intentional Bokeh example with a higher quality lens). Cheaper lenses
tend to have a smaller amount of blades making up the aperture. Having a cheap DSLR lens in the optical train when the dataset is a SHO dataset is... suspicious. This is rather circumstantial, and there may be other explanations for this strange diffraction pattern. However, it often points to AI-induced detail generation (with an AI trained on lots of DSLR data). Particularly if there seems to have been separate deliberate attempt to obfuscate the stellar profiles, as is the case here.
Green arrow; Looking at how fine the detail is, do the stars match? They do not. At all. A non-overexposing star is per definition the smallest detail that was resolved in your dataset. Yet the stars are resolved far worse than the too-good-to-be-true fine detail. Some stars are so smudged that they barely even show up, yet there is tons of dark "detail" many times finer that somehow registered against a darker background where the bright stars did not.
Red arrow; Are there gross discrepancies in detail resolved? And/or do areas that should be high in signal show markedly worse resolved detail than areas of high signal. Yes and yes.
With one or more red flags like these, it's usually time to find a reputable comparison source.
Yellow arrow; (and probably the most obvious to a layperson). Has detail been altered wholesale? Sure has. Detail has clearly been replaced with other plausible (neurally hallucinated) detail. Some has been removed, some has been added. The structures pointed out look nothing like the more canonical 30h dataset.
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- Errors.png (239.67 KiB) Viewed 7309 times
To some, all this may seem inconsequential. To others these manipulations are rather bewildering.
One thing is for sure - one is space photography, the other is space fantasy (and even then, the fantasising was left to an AI!).
We live in a strange time where some think image processing is preparing a dataset so an AI can better hallucinate. And even going as far as
recommending to avoid a tool (such as AutoDev) because the AI cannot replace that tool's
true recovered detail as effectively otherwise.
I for one sure liked things better back in 2014...