Tuesday, 25 October 2011

The Elephant Trunk Nebula (IC1396)

First the final Ha/OIII/OIII close up image:

Object: The Elephant Trunk Nebula (IC1396)
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: ATIK 314L+, -10C
Exposures: Ha - 30 x 600s, bin1x1, 5hrs, OIII - 48 x 600s, bin1x1, 8hrs.    13hrs Total
Processing: DSS, PSCS5

Secondly, a widefield image taken back in 2009 showing the immense size of this nebula. I've inset the recent close up as well, hope you like it!

Object: IC 1396
Telescope: Canon 70-200L F/4
Camera: Modified Canon 350D
Exposures: 12x600s, 18x300s
Processing: Darks, Flats, Bias, DSS, PS CS3

Sunday, 16 October 2011

Witches Broom Ha/OIII Finalised

Object: NGC 6960, "Witches Broom"
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: ATIK 314L+, -11C
Exposures: OIII - 12 x 600, bin1x1, 2hrs, Ha - 11 x 600s, bin1x1, 1hr50mins
Processing: DSS, PSCS5

Pretty sure a mosaic of the veil region won't get finished this season. Oh well, it's not going anywhere fast!

Monday, 26 September 2011

Witches Broom in OIII

Second light for the 314L+ with another quick session. First got the polar alignment nailed, then managed 20mins in OIII of this part of the Veil Nebula before getting clouded out.
So impressed with this camera so far, the noise is so low!

Object: NGC 6960, "Witches Broom"
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: ATIK 314L+, -11C
Exposures: OIII - 2 x 600, bin1x1, 20mins
Processing: DSS, PSCS5

Hope to be adding to this tomorrow night. Probably start with Ha just to get a colour picture, then come back to the OIII to go a bit deeper.

Thursday, 22 September 2011

Big Changes!

DSLR imaging has been replaced by CCD for me now!!

A shiny (gold!) ATIK 314L+ is here!

And a quick tester:

M27 in Ha, starting to show the halo in 30sec subs!! This camera is sensitive!


Object: M27
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: ATIK 314L+, -15C
Exposures: Ha: 152 x 30s bin2x2, 1hr16mins
Processing: Darks, DSS, PSCS5

Comet Garradd Passes by The Coathanger

First light from the new observatory.


Object: Comet Garradd and Coathanger Asterism
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: Modded and Cooled Canon 450D
Exposures: 16x120s, 32mins
Processing: Flats, DSS, PS CS5

Just a quick capture between the clouds.

Monday, 22 August 2011

No Pretty Pictures but a Productive Night (Drift Aligning)

With the observatory complete and the Moon high in the sky last night was ideal to accurately polar align using the drift align method (explained below) and add align points to my EQmod pointing model. Lots of pointing and aligning involved!

For an equatorial mount to track the stars correctly it's axis of rotation must be the same as the axis of rotation of the Earth, this is the point in the sky where the stars appear to rotate around during the night. Luckily, in the Northern hemisphere at least, there is a star (Polaris, the North Star) very near to this point in the sky. Polaris is, however, not exactly on the axis and for long exposure astrophotography the mount must be more accurately aligned than just pointing at Polaris using the polar scope.

A common method to achieve the required accuracy is drift alignment. This involves watching a star for a period of time (say 10-15mins) and seeing which way it drifts during the time, then correcting for it. When accurately polar aligned the star should not drift at all. It can be done manually using an eyepiece with a crosshair or can be 'automated' (apart from the manual adjustment required). Some people like to keep things simple and do it manually, I use a very nice freeware programme called EQAlign (http://eqalign.net/e_eqalign.html). This software is compatible with many cameras (see website for a list) and can control ASCOM compatible mounts. It first measures the camera angle, picks suitable stars, moves the mount to the star(s) then measures the error. I find it straightforward to use and it means I can go and warm up inside while it does it's thing.

In long exposure images bad polar alignment may show up as trailing stars and/or image rotation between sub frames. This will degrade the quality of the final image and restricts the length of exposure possible. Guiding CANNOT correct for bad polar alignment.

Drift aligning does take a little while, depending how accurate you want or need it to be. The more times you repeat the drift align and leaving the star to drift for longer periods of time will both increase the polar alignment accuracy. If you don't have a permanent setup I would say don't bother (unless you get very quick at it) as it takes up precious imaging time (we don't get too much in the UK!) and in most cases, correctly using your mounts polar scope is enough. For visual work there is absolutely no need to drift align.

I'm now looking forward to the next clear night to try out longer (maybe 20min) subs (exposures) and see if accurate polar alignment will smooth out the guiding.....

Feel free to leave a comment and ask questions below

Thursday, 18 August 2011

Astronomy Photographer Of The Year 2011 - Shortlisted

Woah! An email from the Royal Observatory Greenwich a few days ago letting me know I have made the shortlist for APOTY 2011. Absolutely thrilled, some of the best and most outstanding astro photos in the world are entered into the competition and I have to say, I am incredibly surprised and grateful to be shortlisted. Thank you ROG Team!

I'm waiting with anticipation for the results and looking forward to the exhibition....

The shortlisted image:

Saturday, 23 April 2011

M106 and Fuzzies

It's been a long time since my last image... too long!

The outer arms are still noisy, it was a bit of a struggle processing this. There is no substitute for more data but UK weather doesn't play ball to often. Enjoy and click image for larger version.

Object: M106 (24Mly)
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: Modded Canon 450D
Exposures: 24x600s
Processing: Darks, Flats, Bias, DSS, PS CS5

Sunday, 6 February 2011

NGC 6888 - The Crescent Nebula

My processing techniques seem to be improving over time, plus the weather is pretty bad at the moment.


Original with technical details: http://horizonastro.blogspot.com/2010/12/crescent-nebula-ngc-6888.html

Wednesday, 2 February 2011

M27 Reprocess

My processing techniques seem to be improving over time, plus the weather is pretty bad at the moment.
A slight colour tweak and crop

(click for larger)

Original wider version http://horizonastro.blogspot.com/2010/12/m27-with-outer-halo.html

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Distant Lightning and More Distant Stars


Stars, far off Lightning and Etoile-Saint-Cyrice in the foreground

Friday, 21 January 2011

Time-lapse of the Night Sky



Watch in HD: http://www.youtube.com/v/kiRvtZCvAKk&hd=1

A 4 hour timelapse, made up of 483 separate 30 second images.
The video shows the apparent movement of the stars and Milky Way across the skies of Laragne-Montéglin, in the High Alps of Southern France.
Higher resolution star trail image in this post http://horizonastro.blogspot.com/2010/12/pole-star.html
Canon 450D, 18mm F/3.5

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

NGC 7380 - The Wizard Nebula (Ha)

Dug up one last narrowband image from Les Granges
http://horizonastro.blogspot.com/2010/12/les-granges-2010.html

Found in the constellation of Cepheus. The nebula spans 110 light-years and is relatively young, with the stars having emerged from this star-forming region in the last 5 million years.


Object: NGC 7380 (7,000ly)
Telescope: Tak FSQ85
Camera: Atik 320E
Exposures: Ha-30x300s
Processing: Darks, Flats, Bias, DSS, PS CS3

Monday, 10 January 2011

IC1805 - Heart Nebula

This is my...
... first go with my newly modded 450D!
... first go with the new 7nm Ha filter from Santa!
... first 20min sub!

The Heart Nebula is an emission nebula located in the Perseus arm of the Galaxy in the constellation on Cassiopeia. The nebula's light output and shape are driven by the radiation of a small group of stars near the nebula's centre.


Object: IC1805 - The Heart Nebula (7,500ly)
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Camera: Modified Canon 450D
Exposures: Ha-1x600s, 2x1200s
Processing: DSS, PS CS3

Friday, 7 January 2011

450D Mod Complete!

Everything's gone red! Yay!

Finished the Mod on my 450D a few days ago. The original IR cut filter (which also blocks the Ha wavelengths a lot) has been removed and replaced with an Astrodon Inside filter.

I found the mod reasonably ok, following the online guide by Gary Honis and his YouTube video made it a lot easier. The trickiest bit was reinstalling the shutter assembly, but carefully does it, after a few anxious moments it went into place...

Looking forward to trying the camera out and my new 2" 7nm Ha filter from Santa as well, when this bloomin' weather clears up!

Clear skies!

IC1396 Reprocess

I feel my processing techniques have come along a bit since I started out and the weather is awful. This was one of my first images and was featured on the Sky At Night Magazine cover CD.

The new version is a bit toned down colour wise and smoother.