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Published byPriscilla Hunter Modified over 9 years ago
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Credit- NASA
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Astrophotography Copyright © Dave McDonald 2006
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Agenda What is astrophotography? Basic concepts Imagers Techniques Guiding Advanced concepts
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What is astrophotography? Taking images of the sky (celestial objects or phenomena) Can be done any time of the day or night
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A typical session… Choose your subject Choose your technique Take the image(s) Process the image(s) Display your results Techniques vary from very basic to highly technical
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Why do it? Recording events (conjunctions, phases, solar activity, Deep Impact) Advancing personal knowledge Share your experiences Real science ‘ A picture paints a thousand words’
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Before you take the plunge… Decide what you want to do and set clear goals Short, medium and long-term Where will you be living in 5 years? What are you prepared to spend? Research, research, research
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How… Types of imager Basic techniques
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Film Take a snapshot of the projected sun Use an SLR (similar techniques to Digital Cameras – next) Film is chosen based on the subject Can get very technical (hypered-film etc) Is diminishing in popularity with the advent of digital techniques
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Digital cameras - Webcams Cheap, easy to use, lots of free software for capturing and processing images Stunning planetary images Very popular
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Digital cameras – integral lens Dual purpose – astrophotography and holiday snaps Popular Coming down in price
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Digital cameras – SLR’s Dual purpose Very sensitive Expensive Can purchase variety of lenses for different applications
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Astronomical CCD imagers Purpose designed Very sensitive $300 to $40,000 Can be used for science Superb deep sky images
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Basic Techniques Point and click Eyepiece projection Prime focus To guide or not to guide…
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Point and click Hold your camera and click! Works with webcams and digital/film cameras Doesn’t work with CCD’s (no lens) Can piggy-back your camera on your OTA or use a guiding system to take longer exposures (more on guiding later)
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Eyepiece projection Hold your camera to the eyepiece and take an image Can purchase t-adapters and rings to get the camera lens as close to the eyepiece as possible (to avoid vignetting)
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Prime focus Your OTA becomes the lens Webcams, DSLR’s, CCD’s
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Guiding The sky moves… If you take an image, trailing increases with exposure length (can be an advantage!) Can use a camera guiding system Can use your mount’s guiding system (piggy-back, projection or prime-focus)
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Advanced Concepts CCD and OTA matching Collimation Orthogonality Polar aligning Guiding PEC, mount training Integrated CCD guiding Dual CCD guiding Cooling Focusing Filters Image reduction (darks, bias, flat-field) Software/hardware Advanced processing Photometry/astrometry Nova searches
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Q&A
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