Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTheodore Preston Modified over 9 years ago
1
Signal vs Noise: Image Calibration First… some terminology: Light Frame: The individual pictures you take of your target. Dark Frame: An image taken with no light hitting the sensor. Flat Frame: A half saturated white light picture used to correct for optical path problems Flat Dark: Same as a Dark frame but at the exposure time of the Flat (it is applied to the Flat). Bias Frame: A minimum time exposure dark frame taken to account for CCD internal baseline charge. (can be safely ignored unless doing advanced imaging & cal). ADU or PV: Anolog Digital Units or Pixel Values. The “count” of how many photons hit a given pixel. Deep Sky Photography: Image Calibration
2
Image Calibration: Images (Light frames) are “calibrated” to remove noise from the Sensor and Optics chain. Dark Frames Taken with the scope/camera covered and the sensor at the same temp as the Light frames to be taken. The Dark frames exposure length should be the same as the Light frames. Several frames (5 to 8) should be taken and stacked/averaged to make a “master dark”. The Master Dark frame is subtracted from the Light Frames. This removes the noise added by hot pixels, dark current, and bias noise in the CCD itself. Deep Sky Photography: Image Calibration
3
Deep Sky Photography: Typical Dark Frame
4
Flat frames Used to correct for imperfections (dust, vignette, etc) in the optical train. Taken at focus, under a uniform, white, dim source, at an exposure time long enough to about half saturate the CCD pixels. Taking flats doesn’t take much time. Typical exposure lengths are 0.3 to 2 seconds each. Like the darks, many frames should be taken, stacked and averaged. After the Flat is stacked. It is normalized (each pixel value divided by the average PV of the frame). The Flat is applied by dividing it into the Light frames. The process of Applying the flats is typically accomplished by your calibrating/stacking software Flat Darks Flat Darks are taken at the same exposure time as the Flat frames. Used just like regular dark frames against the individual Flat frames to corrects the Flat frames for CCD noise. Deep Sky Photography: Image Calibration
5
Deep Sky Photography: Typical Flat Frame
6
Deep Sky Photography: Raw Light
7
Deep Sky Photography: Dark Subtracted
8
Deep Sky Photography: Flat Applied
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.