Dear forum, I did first light on my new refractor (Takahashi FSQ-106edx4, camera ZWO asi294mm, Baader Ha 7nm filter). I have a lot of issues still (late nights, a lot of other things) with focuser and also auto-guiding, so no final image yet  But first few images were 5-minute subs with hydrogen alpha on Pelican Nebula. I am quite happy with them (not other filters and full project yet, quite defocused etc etc  ). But I am wondering if forum would know what is happening on 2nd sub. There is additional star that is not there on 1st, 3rd or any other out of 18 frames I did in that hour and half:  I hope it is visible, it stuck out quite obviously when I did blink in PixInsight. One can see normal satellite trails but this star is there only for 1 5-minute sub. Any idea what could it be? Zoomed in picture shows the star is a little bit deformed (in the frame with other lower bright star for comparison):  |
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I’ll throw out a guess…. Aliens.
or… maybe a geo sat that just happened to flare at that time? I’m guessing it flared for shorter than 5 minutes, which gave it that funny shape.
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Could be a meteor moving straight towards you. So, no visible trail, just a bright spot that appears for a couple seconds and then fades.
Cheers, Scott
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a random splatter of hot/cold pixels maybe
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Sean Mc: I’ll throw out a guess…. Aliens.
or… maybe a geo sat that just happened to flare at that time? I’m guessing it flared for shorter than 5 minutes, which gave it that funny shape. Hi Sean, I was thinking the same - it could be geo satellite, it's still weird to flash only once - but for me it's most plausible explanation at this moment  |
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Scott Badger: Could be a meteor moving straight towards you. So, no visible trail, just a bright spot that appears for a couple seconds and then fades.
Cheers, Scott Hi Scott, Maybe. But that would be reeeeeally weird a?  But it's one of the possibilities of course  |
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a random splatter of hot/cold pixels maybe Hi messierman, Maybe. But would be really weird to have so many temporary hot/cold pixels grouped together I think...
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Jure Menart: Hi Scott,
Maybe. But that would be reeeeeally weird a? But it's one of the possibilities of course I've seen meteors in that way 3 or 4 times. The last time was just last week. I looked up and and saw what appeared to be a planet, but brighter than Venus, a little redder than Mars, and where there shouldn't be a planet (near Polaris). It didn't move and was visible for a few seconds then quickly faded away. Cheers, Scott
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No idea but it looks square compared to your other stars
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TiffsAndAstro: No idea but it looks square compared to your other stars Yeah it indeed does  interesting and puzzling  |
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Scott Badger: I've seen meteors in that way 3 or 4 times. The last time was just last week. I looked up and and saw what appeared to be a planet, but brighter than Venus, a little redder than Mars, and where there shouldn't be a planet (near Polaris). It didn't move and was visible for a few seconds then quickly faded away.
Cheers, Scott Hi Scott, Yeah it seems this is the most logical explanation. Funny though to have such a direct path  Thanks for your comments!
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For some reason, CMOS sensors are not as susceptible to cosmic rays as CCD sensors; however, it's still possible to catch one every once in a while. Depending on the angle of incidence a cosmic ray can produce all kinds of interesting patterns. I don't know exactly what this is but I wouldn't rule out the possibility that it's due to a high energy particle. I used to see stuff like this all the time with my 16803 based cameras.
John
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I think John is on the right track with a cosmic ray, that was my first thought. Is the image you showed raw, or was it processed in any way? A cosmic ray would typically have sharp edges, but processing steps such as shifting or rotating the image in preparation for stacking can re-bin the pixels and smooth the edges.
A geosynchronous satellite would trail over time (of order 15 arcseconds per second), so the flare would have to be very short lived to produce a point source.
-Josh
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Aren’t geo sats supposed to be stationary?
cosmic ray sounds plausible too.
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Josh Walawender: I think John is on the right track with a cosmic ray, that was my first thought. Is the image you showed raw, or was it processed in any way? A cosmic ray would typically have sharp edges, but processing steps such as shifting or rotating the image in preparation for stacking can re-bin the pixels and smooth the edges.
A geosynchronous satellite would trail over time (of order 15 arcseconds per second), so the flare would have to be very short lived to produce a point source.
-Josh The images I showed aren't heavily processed - I stretched them and convert them to JPEG just for me easier to add pointing finger.
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