From: Ray Byrne <ray@in4media.co.uk>

Date: March 26, 2007 4:30:35 AM MDT

To: Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com

Subject: Re: [Astro_IIDC] Saturn from the first hours of spring


Hi Alan,


This is the best I've seen this apparition (I'm on Cloudynights Planetary imaging forum so see quite a lot of stuff and Damian Peach has me on his mailing list so I see his stuff too) thanks for sharing. Also a big thanks for explaining your method. Actually on a thread in the aforementioned, one chap said "we don't use Macs here we use PCs". I put him right about the use of Macs in planetary imaging by pointing him to your site, he later said "well it doesn't matter what platform you use it's the results that count" which actually is fair comment.


Clear skies and good seeing to you!

 

On 25 Mar 2007, at 19:43, Alan Friedman wrote:

Hi all -

Here's a first processing of Saturn captured with the 10" mak on March 20th in a nice little
pocket of steady air that arrived just after the vernal equinox. (Follow the thumbnail link to
the picture from the "Latest Images" section of my website) -

http://www.avertedimagination.com/latest_1.htm

I found (with help from Milton!) four moons lurking nearby, so I stretched the image
enough to bring them out and included them in this picture.

This image was prepared using the image processing component of Astro IIDC. The data
used was captured through RGB filters - 3 streams each of R and G, 2 streams of B. About
350 frames of 1200 were stacked from each stream. Each stack was aligned four times,
two for the ring ansae and two covering the edge of saturn's disk. Final assembly of the
picture is done in Adobe Photoshop CS2. This was my first real effort at developing a post
processing workflow in Astro IIDC - it worked beautifully on this data and saved a BIG pile
of time over my usual hand selection routine.

Usually I glean my luminance (detail) information for Saturn from video streams shot
without a filter. At the focal length I prefer (8-11 meters) the RGB filters absorb so much
light that a slow shutter (66ms or even longer) is needed. These streams tend to be either
grainy and dim, or very soft if given an adequate exposure. This night the seeing was
good enough that the data was sharp even with exposures above 1/10 of a second. I was
able to stack a third of the RGB frames for an image that was quite smooth and didn't
require heavy processing. I sharpened the final image by making a luminance layer from
just the red and green data and added this to the color composite - a technique I have
used for a couple of years on (much brighter) Jupiter. I would guess the seeing approached
8/10 at times - a hint of the Encke division was visible in the blue filtered data - quite
unusual from my location.

I still have a pile of unfiltered data to go through and perhaps add. I don't think it will
show any additional detail (there were no spots or storms that I could detect) but it will
probably make the final picture a little smoother and prettier.

Hope you enjoy this first working version -

Alan


ATB


Ray Byrne

in4media | graphic and website DESIGN

T: 01793 435704

W: http://www.in4media.co.uk