In this image, SII has been added in place of the green of the earlier image. The need for SII is proved by this excellent Cloudy Nights thread: http://tinyurl.com/yeqauur
The final 18x8' set of exposures (2.4 hours) in SII was obtained on the night of 12-18-09 using the TMB80CF and an Astronomik 12nm SII filter. Ha was obtained in October (38x5')and OIII in November (41x5'). Total exposure time is one minute short of 9 hours. Software used to capture and process includes PHD and Nebulosity 2, Registar, Photoshop Elements 7, Maxim DL5, and Photoshop CS3. Thanks to Don Taylor for suggesting effective ways to rid it of pink halos. In the end, I selected the color in CS3, changed it a bit, and de-saturated some.
December 22, 2009
December 20, 2009
Smaller NGC 1491 Narrowband
December 19, 2009
NGC 1491 Narrowband
Here are two iterations of NGC 1491 in narrowband. The first is in Hubble Palette. The second is the other palette I prefer---Ha+L, Ha=C, OIII=M, and SII=Y. I like seeing the Ha as blue, and the yellow stars stand out well against it.
I learned something last night as I collected SII: Never shoot over a chimney. Silly, right? I was befuddled that the guide star was jumping this way and that. I checked my mount over with a flashlight three times. I was getting fuzzy images in the main camera. I realized this morning that I had the fire running inside so that I could warm my feet after checking the camera. The camera took a long time to check because so many things were going wrong because the fire was running! I couldn't figure out what was wrong (ok, it was almost 2 am). Now I realize I was ruining my images by keeping a warm fire waiting. Oh, well. The damaged SII information shows up in the image as a slight smearing of some of the stars in the direction the air currents were coming out of the chimney.
I learned something last night as I collected SII: Never shoot over a chimney. Silly, right? I was befuddled that the guide star was jumping this way and that. I checked my mount over with a flashlight three times. I was getting fuzzy images in the main camera. I realized this morning that I had the fire running inside so that I could warm my feet after checking the camera. The camera took a long time to check because so many things were going wrong because the fire was running! I couldn't figure out what was wrong (ok, it was almost 2 am). Now I realize I was ruining my images by keeping a warm fire waiting. Oh, well. The damaged SII information shows up in the image as a slight smearing of some of the stars in the direction the air currents were coming out of the chimney.
December 4, 2009
The Narrowband Bubble, New Iterations
These images have become my favorites from this set. It is the same data as the others, but the colors are more pleasing, I think. I used Maxim DL 5, which I am trying out, for each. The first is an Ha;SII;Ha;OIII as LRGB. Further processing was then done in PSCS3. In the second, I combined Ha as Cyan, SII as Magenta, and OIII as Yellow. The image was then stretched and minimally processed in CS3.
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