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Good morning, In order to improve the quality of my planetary shots, I was going to try autoguiding with PHD. Has anyone tried this with planetary shots? Does it even work? I was concerned because my planetary scope has a fairly large focal length (1540), and I often use a 2x barlow, and I wonder how much good guiding will do at that level of magnification. Any thoughts or experience? |
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I do not think that this will make sense. During planetary imaging a single frame has low integration times (like 8 ms or something). Autoguiding will not improve images taken with an integration time that low. Most guiding setups send corrections in intervals of 1-6 seconds to your mount.
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I guess that's my question, at that Focal length, can PHD work fast enough, and will my 50mm guide scope have the resolution to keep the planet centered in the frame? The more I think about it the more I am doubting that it will work. ![]() |
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I dont think that this will work. The seeing is far more problematic than the small deviation from the tracking within that 8 ms. And you cant use an autoguider to avoid seeing-problems. Man, that would be great :-)
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And you cant use an autoguider to avoid seeing-problems. Man, that would be great :-) What we need is an adaptive mirror and a laser like the VLT... When do you suppose those will be on the amateur market? Oh well, it was nice to kick the idea around... |
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I would love to own this really great solution, but i assume that the pricing is somewhat too high for my astro budget :-)
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Normally when I have taken planetary shots with my 1250mm and barlows, I made a movie then processed it using Pipp, AS!3 and or Registax6. My understanding is that due to the waves in the atmosphere, this method gives you the best chance of capturing several clear shots, and then those are stacked. I think I read about it called "lucky imaging" I had some nice shots for my equipment
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Adaptive Optics isnt that expensive for amateur astronomers. https://optcorp.com/products/starlight-xpress-active-optics-with-usb-qsi-compatable With my ZWo camera I use Firecapture and simply select Auto align and the planet just sits still (apart from translation distortions of seeing). Thats what you are really wanting. I am using 3000mm focal length Meade12inACF and 2x barlow, on a well polar aligned Titan mount. The postprocessing is faciltitated then. Some guiding corrections are then applied during liveview capture. Cheers GlennB |
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Didn't know that. Amazing. This thing is on my wishlist now :-) [Edit]: After doing some research and reading reviews, this thing remains on my wishlist, but at the bottom of it. I have to check if it really fits both my approach and my setup. |
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Glad you asked, I am just now starting to dabble with planetary imaging and the thought of guiding to keep the subject from drifting has been on my mind. So it seems to just "chase" the subject via the mount controller to keep up with any drift is the way to go then. Thank you all. ![]() |
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My five cents: I would suggest to invest into polar allignment (the cheapest way - to use Polar Scope Align App for Iphone or similar, helps a lot). With good polar allignment you do not really need even PIPP ![]() |
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Yes. You can get it polar aligned close enough with a polar scope or other methods for planetary. A little known secret is that a small amount of drift can be beneficial with planetary, assuming you're using high frame rate camera. Let's say for example, you have dust spots on the sensor. If the planet was perfectly centered, that dust spot would be concentrated on that same spot on every frame. But as it slowly moves, you get a better random mix of pixels. You also get a better random mix of hot and cold pixels. Otherwise the hot pixels (image noise) are also concentrated in the same spot or region of the image on every frame. A very small amount of drift is not a bad thing at all. It does'nt have to be perfect with planetary.
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Everyone keeps on telling me this, “Guiding is not necessary for planetary.” Okay, well what if I would like to do it regardless? Even with good polar alignment there IS drift. I don’t want to make small manual adjustments every so often. I want to concentrate on learning FireCapture, in the moment, with a real subject in front of me. Understanding how all the many, many settings affect the shot. That means hours on a target. … and hours of making irritating small adjustments. So with that in mind, for those of you who have ACTUALLY guided for planetary, could you please share how you did it and what the results were.
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During my FireCapture education, I learned that FireCapture itself has planetary guiding functionality. … and it works GREAT! Here is the link to the tutorial. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoNJq_YmEtk |
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This would only make sense on very dim planets and asteroids (or comets). And in that case you may lock on to the target with your guiding software if it is bright enough for your guide sensor. |
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Michael Juliano: If the object is drifting out of the field then the simplest thing to do is get a better polar alignment. You don't say anything about your setup but I assume that if your scope has a native FL of 1540mm then it's on some kind of equatorial mount that can be polar aligned. SharpCap has a tool that will help you get an alignment in just a few min. If you're not using it, you should. It's a simple process and there no reason not to use it. 3080mm really isn't that long for planetary and imaging runs are short and as has been mentioned, a small amount of movement is helpful (dithering). Guiding using PHD2 will not help you at all, in fact, it would probably reduce the number of good frames. The answer is a decent polar alignment |
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I used to image at around 8-10 m of FL using a GP-DX and guiding (even if it were to be available, which wasn't) wasn't not only never entertained but never actually though to be desirable feature at all. A good PA, as Tony mentioned above, will keep even the largest planets (Venus & Jupiter) centered in the FOV with occasional nudges using the handset.
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That’s a great shot, amazing capture!
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Tony Carro: Thank you Tony ![]() It was hard to process, specially because the moon and the sensor that I was using, but at the end I think it was a good image. I would love to do it again ![]() Regards, Cesar |
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Makes me want to try and take a shot of Saturn with my 765mm Refractor never have before just DSO and just starting at that.
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Tony Carro: You should do it! Do you want to know something cool? I used a medium size guidescope to to the guiding and the C8 for imaging, but for do the perfect align with the two scopes, I used an eyepiece first. and when I saw the planet through the C8, everything falled in my head: it was like.. damm I didin't put an eyepiece in any of the scopes in almost 4 years. And I miss it! I miss doing some visual astronomy. Because of this, I preparing myself, even bought a few days ago some planetary glass filters to play this Autumm with visual astronomy and enjoying some views of the planets. Regards, Cesar |
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I have a couple of lenses that have not been used yet. A Baader 31mm and a Baader zoom lens both 2 inch variety. I have a 25 year old Nexstar 8 that I need to put right by the imaging scope. Weather is real nice outside in my backyard.
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