From: "bobtek4860" <bobtek@fishcamp.com>
Date: September 6, 2005 4:35:53 PM MDT
To: Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: Old Aristarchus VS Stretched Aristarchus Comparion
Alan,
I really enjoyed your picture of M57. I'm curious about the data collection you did for the
shot. How many frames, exposure time, etc.
Bob
--- In Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com, Alan Friedman <alan@g...> wrote:
Hi Milton -
Nice comparison of two processing values. Overall I prefer the first
rather than the stretched due to the artifacts introduced in the dark
regions in the stretched version (perhaps from the sharpening). It is
true that curve based adjustment offers a lot more powerful control
than a linear adjustment. In the same way an unsharp mask applied to
the entire image is less powerful than sharpening applied using
selection tools (ie in Photoshop) as some areas of the image are blown
out with a sharpening level that is perfect for another area.
I've uploaded a couple of new images to the files area - an aristarchus
regions at similar focal length to Milton's but at a different sun
angle, an image of the crater moretus and southern highlands region at
7.5 meter focal length, and (in the DSO folder) a just completed webcam
image of M57 taken this past weekend at the Black Forest Star Party.
I've always wanted to try a deep sky target with my webcam and
AstroIIDC - this one came out better than I thought it would.
Looking forward to meeting some of you in Chicago this week,
best,
Alan
On Sep 6, 2005, at 3:34 PM, Milton Aupperle wrote:
Hi Folks;
I was testing out the new image processing module over the weekend in
the Astro IIDC beta version for DSO's and thought it might be
interesting to see what one can do with it with lunar images,
especially along the terminator where contrast can be extreme.
Compare the original "Aristarchus_050420_MJA.jpg" to the new
streteched version "Aristarchus_050420_MJA_Stretched.jpg" in the Lunar
File section. A lot of hidden detail is now visible, especially the
rills.
Using linear level adjustments to bring out the dark areas usually
wipes out the bright areas. But using the Log based curves can solve
this pretty easily.
I may have over sharpened it a little bit in Astro IIDC 2.1, but this
doesn't increase the noise level at all.
TTYL..
Milton Aupperle
SPONSORED LINKS
Affiliate program software
Construction software program
Medical software program
Estate program real software
Software development program
Scheduling program software
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
â–ª Â Visit your group "Astro_IIDC" on the web.
Â
â–ª Â To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
 Astro_IIDC-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
Â
â–ª Â Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
Service.