Hi Dietmar,
decay wrote: ↑Tue Aug 20, 2024 4:36 pm
Stefan B wrote: ↑Tue Aug 20, 2024 9:26 am
maybe green is reduced a bit too much, resulting in a slightly purple cast.
Not sure - maybe the reason is that I used Balmer Series response, but it was Pure Red in your case? I will check both options.
That may also be the case. But looking at your histogram on ABin
it could be that the channel alignment is a bit off. Green starts first, then comes blue, then red. From most of my quite red NBAccent images I am used to see that green and blue align well in general and that red has more of the brighter pixels of course but that curve of the red channel starts at the same point of the histogram. This for example is the histogram of my brutally red Pelican image:
You can see that blue and green almost overlap and red is totally different. But all three channels start almost at the exact same spot on the left. The histogram of my NGC 6914 is actually not a good example:
Here the red channel is probably pushed a bit too much. I sometimes see this taken to the extreme when people post images where there seems to be Ha everywhere and they get comments like "Woah, you captured an insane amount of Ha signal" but actually they just stretched red so much that they tainted their neutral background in red.
Anyway, I hope you know what I am aiming at. I am no expert at all in signal processing or interpreting histograms but that's how I (try to) read them.
decay wrote: ↑Tue Aug 20, 2024 4:36 pm
By the way, I wondered why your histogram has so many colors and mine basically only three
![Think :think:](./images/smilies/eusa/think.gif)
Is your image in the RGB color space or did you convert to YMCK? But maybe I am totally off here...
No idea what you are talking about. I'm not feeling guilty in any way
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon/lol.gif)
I'm using darktable (photography software) to export to JPEG format. I don't see any difference compared to the original TIFF produced by StarTools.
So, well, that's embarrasing for me. I meant the CMYK color model (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMYK_color_model) but obviously was thinking of the song by the Village People
![Doh! :doh:](./images/smilies/eusa/doh.gif)
Anyway... you can choose CMYK for example in Photoshop instead of the default RGB. I was thinking that this maybe changes the histogram display or the curves on ABin. For comparison your histogram and mine:
Yours is much more...don't know how to say...divers? Interesting? Mine has just three almost Gaussian distributions (well, yes, not the red channel; blame all that Ha for that).
Here's Mike's NGC6914 histogram:
Just wondering why yours looks so different. And I don't want to indicate that yours is wrong. Maybe mine is. Or both. Or none of them
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon/wink.gif)
Maybe it's really just Balmer vs pure red as you said.
Regards
Stefan