Try increasing gamma if dark sections aren't distinguished

Try increasing gamma if dark sections aren't distinguished

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Perseids 2023

perseids wide field 8/12-13/23
north lower right
radiant at perseus right side

having repeatedly tried and failed to catch any meteor images in my back yard over the past few years, i elected to go out to the Orange County Astronomers dark sky site in anza to image this year's perseids with near new moon conditions.  

Burn line from recent fires near OCA site
Dave Kodama's cameras ready to go
OCA regular heungsoo choi in action


perseid buzzing OCA's anza house 8/12/23 23:06

while i've seen meteor showers from dark skies, including Yosemite and Yellowstone parks, this was in many ways the best.  others have had more frequent bursts, but these were typically faint white lines.  this night's show was filled with bright orange streaks.  by no means a meteor storm--the bright one's trickled in, but there were more than i've ever seen.  over the course of 7 hours, even with passing clouds, my camera captured 21 bright meteors.  they were rainbow colored in the camera, changing from red to green as they heated in the atmosphere, despite an orange visual appearance.  

perseid 8/13/23 00:50 local time

there were many faint meteor candidates, but  they were difficult to confirm due to abundant satellite traffic.  i only included bright streaks that were colored and directed towards the radiant in perseus. 

I used a fisheye lens to capture a wide swathe of sky, nearly horizon to horizon:

milky way center, perseid top left
N-north star, A-andromeda galaxy, P-constellation perseus
northern horizon bottom left
southern horizon top right
SUV bottom right :(
8/13/23 00:50 local time 

sadly, there were clouds passing through many of the images, making a composite difficult.

Star trails 8/12-13/23
polaris, north star lower left
anza house bottom left corner
my annoying SUV side light bottom right corner
southern horizon top right corner
(click for larger size)

typical recommendations are to just sit back and look up to view meteors. 
meteor shower observing accessory

the distribution in this capture was skewed towards the radiant in perseus on the horizon.  however, many of those were foreshortened with longer streaks on the opposite horizon.  

perseid distribution map 8/12-13/23
(click for larger size)

the best time to view meteors is between midnight and dawn.  i've also read 4 AM.  

a steady stream with clusters at 2AM and 3AM

imaging details:
5/12-13/23 10 PM to 5 AM
Anza, CA
passing clouds
nikon D850
Sigma 15mm F/2.8 EX DG fisheye
20 sec, iso 1600

missed the first hour as i set the camera delay to 20 minutes instead of 20 seconds between shots :(

the last meteor was caught at 5 AM, after astronomical dawn.  i saw several bright meteors as i was setting up, so i should have started imaging much sooner despite the "after midnight" recommendations.  

Sunday, July 23, 2023

Venus and Mercury

took another crack and venus and mercury.  unfortunately seeing was not great...

Venus 4/16/23 02:43 UTC
IR pass 850nm

Mercury 4/16/23 02:33 UTC
IR pass 850nm

i decided image venus during the day (venus is bright enough to see in broad daylight, it's just really hard to find) for 2 reasons: 

-all other things being equal, the seeing should be better with the planet at higher altitude 

-i was hoping to capture motion of venusian clouds by imaging over a long period of time.  

sadly it was a total bust. imaging runs over 20 minutes captured no cloud detail whatsoever (until earthly clouds obscured my view).  perhaps a hint of something towards the upper half as venus got lower in the sky:

Venus 4/17/23 00:36 UTC
UV

Venus 4/17/23 00:05 UTC
IR pass 850 nm

at a recent meeting of the OC astronomers, Chris Go (who admittedly doesn't image venus) suggested that sunlight saturates the daylight sky with UV ruining the detection of clouds.  or perhaps it was just a clear day on venus ;)

I have captured cloud detail in the past with this set up at twilight:

venus UV clouds


Image details:
camera ZWO ASI 290MM 
filters: ZWO IR pass 850, Baader U-filter bw 320-380nm
celestron 11" Edge HD
East Bluff, CA

4/16/23
mediocre seeing
02:43 UTC
2x barlow
IR pass 850 filter:

venus
FPS (avg.)=215
Shutter=0.746ms
Gain=351 (58%)
Frames captured=69635

mercury
02:33 UTC
2x barlow
FPS (avg.)=116
Shutter=3.281ms
Gain=436 (72%)
Frames captured=12765

4/17/23
Venus 
no barlow as UV is faint
mediocre seeing

UV filter:
00:36 UTC
FPS (avg.)=217
Shutter=2.055ms
Gain=351 (58%)
Frames captured=39233 

IR filter:
00:05 UTC
FPS (avg.)=42 ?!
Shutter=0.191ms
Gain=351 (58%)
Frames captured=12865

Saturday, July 22, 2023

another falcon

dragged the kids out to the front yard to see a falcon launch with potential for a sunlit plume against the night sky. having been dragged out the night before for a launch that was delayed an hour and then aborted at T-5 seconds, their patience was wearing thin.   

after seeing a thin rocket trail rise above the trees followed by a faint orange plume, my son went back inside...  


only to miss the sunlit plume light up as the rocket passed out of the earth's shadow:
rocket and the owl tree


Falcon-9 7/19/23
note detached fairings and 1st stage trailing in the plume. 


Falcon-9 7/19/23
note detached fairings and 1st stage trailing in the plume

local color


Image details:
wide view
Samsung galaxy 22S ultra

close ups
nikon D850
F-S DX NIKKOR 55-300mm f/4.5-5.6G ED VR
ISO 1600

7/19/23 Newport Beach, CA

Monday, July 3, 2023

night owls

 decided to try my astrophotography skills on a noisy pair in a tree across the street:

Great Horned Owl

Note the big black eyes indicating a night shot, in contrast to the golden irises seen in daylight images.  The owls were not visible to the eye so it took a bit of work to aim and focus.  

Here's the noisy couple in the "owl tree" across the street where they hoot away to the chagrin of my neighbor who is less enamored with them due to their noise and their abundant droppings.    


Great Horned Owls

Oh, and here's M97 the owl nebula for comparison:


image details:
birds:
tall view
Samsung galaxy 22S ultra
f1.8 1/4 s 23mm ISO 2500
1/7/23 eastbluff, CA
close up
nikon D850
F-S DX NIKKOR 55-300mm f/4.5-5.6G ED VR
f/5 @130 mm 1/2 sec ISO 1600
11/10/22 eastbluff, CA

Owl nebula:
Celestron Nexstar8GPS @f/6.3(1300mm), SX AO-.2 sec exposures, CS 10 nm HA/baader oiii 8.5 nm, H9.
4/12-16/08 los alamitos, CA
HFD 3-4 arcsec
bortle white skies
21x20 min Oiii, 20x20 min Ha
maybe time for a reshoot with NII


a rocket for the 4th (falcon 9 6/22-23/23)

 there was a late night falcon 9 launch on 6/22

it being a weekday in the midst of a loooong run of of clouds, i chose to give at quick try from my front yard rather than an optimal viewing site.  so with the spaceX stream running on my phone i went out and looked northwest towards vandenberg.  i'd seen the orange glow of a night falcon launch in the past, so i thought i might catch it.

12:19AM "Lift off"...nothing

T+1:16 "Max Q"...nothing

T+2:35-2:38 Main Engine Cut Off, "stage separation"...nothing

I begin packing up just as a cone of light grazed the owl tree:

Falcon 9


i was able to catch a few closer shots as it faded. difficult catching a moving target in the dark:




Image details:
in viewing the spacex stream, it looks like they were clouded out locally which might be why i couldn't see the rocket on initial lift off.

Eastbluff, CA
6/23/23 ~12:25 AM

wide view
Samsung galaxy 22S ultra
f1.8 1/4 s 23mm ISO 4000
10/27/22 Newport Beach, CA

nikon D850
F-S DX NIKKOR 55-300mm f/4.5-5.6G ED VR
f/4.5 @55 mm 1/80 sec ISO 102,400!
used absurdly high iso to capture the faint moving object
this resulted in very noisy images which had to be denoised after dark subtraction





Tuesday, December 27, 2022

More mars: northern polar hood, bonus jupiter

 After imaging the mars occultation (which occurred at low altitude), I waited a few hours for mars to reach maximum elevation and increased the magnification.

A layer of clouds, referred to as the northern polar hood, covers the north pole in these images.  Surface structure is more evident in the IR images which cut through cloud cover. 

Mars 12/8/22  07:26.1 UTC

probably snowing on the north pole.  


also got some bonus time on jupiter:



Jupiter 2022-12-08 04:36.3 UTC

Jupiter 2022-12-08 04:29.9-04:42.6 UTC


Image details:
average seeing
Mars 12/8/22  07:26.1 UTC
Jupiter 12/8/2204:29.9-04:42.6
eastbluff, CA
celestron 11" Edge HD
ZWO ASI 290MC (one shot color camera)
2x powermate
baader IR/UV block filter
ZWO IR pass 850 nm for IR images

Jupiter 
Image reduced by 50% due to poor seeing
10x90 sec
FPS (avg.)=42
Shutter=2.581ms
Gain=351 (58%)
Histogramm=41%


Mars
RGB 6x120 sec
FPS (avg.)=145
Shutter=1.000ms
Gain=351 (58%)
Histogramm=46%

IR 2x120 sec
FPS (avg.)=147
Shutter=5.000ms
Gain=351 (58%)
Histogramm=33%

Monday, December 19, 2022

mars eclipse (occultation) 12/7/22 aka 12/8/22 ~02:27 UTC

 On December 7th, both mars and the moon were in opposition--directly opposite the earth.  for the moon that means a full moon.  for mars it means the planet is roughly closest to the earth in it's orbit, so visually much larger and brighter than other times during the year.  since the planets in our solar system generally orbit in the same plane...the moon "eclipsed" (occulted) mars this year at opposition--an excellent photo opportunity.  

Mars emerging from lunar occultation
12/8/22 ~03:34 UTC
stacked composite

A different perspective:

Mars has risen
occultation egress
stacked composite
Same image, full scale crop:
occultation egress
stacked composite
full scale crop




Occultation start, 4x speed:


I used sky safari, to preview the location of mars at egress then, eyeballing the craters, navigated my narrow high power field to where I thought mars would appear.  Miraculously it appeared dead center in the field.  
Occultation end 4x speed:
Kudo's to the sky safari app

Imaging commentary:
The occultation occurred with the moon rising low in the east (6:30 PM local), so I had to move from my usual imaging location.  Unable to set up the night before, I had to bolt from work like Fred Flintstone at the whistle and set up from scratch.  polar aligned sighting thru the saddle at polaris, then 1 object align on mars.  did not have time to tune the ADC. Whatever settings I had last time were probably better than nothing.  

Used a lower gain and max histogram to improve the dynamic range.  
Processing was a bear.  Stacking software (autostakkert) could not handle my occasional field adjustments, so I wound up having to edit the video into smaller clips with PIPP, virtual dub, and photoshop, then process separately.  

The first two images are composites combining a stacked mars image, a stacked moon image, and a single frame.  

Image details:
12/8/22  ~02:27-03:34 UTC
eastbluff, CA
celestron 11" Edge HD
ZWO ASI 290MC (one shot color camera)
ZWO ADC
baader IR/UV block filter
12 fps, 1.844 ms, 152 gain, 100% histogram
isolated mars after egress
56 fps .924 ms, 251 gain (only 41%, should have been higher)

This was my second time using the celestron CGX which has some nice ergonomic features for rapid set up