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Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 07-18-2013, 11:37 AM  
Astrophotography
Posted By smigol
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
It's been a while since I did a big astrophoto.

I'd wanted to revisit the idea of a large mosaic of some of the summer objects and had the chance to do this earlier in the month. Since I've managed to understand the amp glow situation with my K10D, doing a mosaic is no longer a forbidden project. Previously, the amp glow would make any stitching effort useless as there would be horrible lines. Also, I've learned a lot about doing plate solves in the field so that I can get accurate camera positions night after night.

Shot from home in a suburban location, the transparency varied over the nights, giving some uneven background to the mosaic. I had to reshoot some of the sequences on better nights to give good source material. Also, because I didn't plan how the frames would map on the sphere of the sky, there was a lot of wasted data because of a diagonal canvas.

The mosaic is assembled from 3 overlapping frames each with at least two nights dedicated to them. Total sum is 58 subs at 1200 seconds giving about 19 hours of integration.


Ha region around the Eagle Nebula by S Migol, on Flickr
Here's an annotated version.

Here is the link to full size on Astrobin (note that full size is 6016 x 2448)
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 07-16-2013, 09:11 PM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By kamayok3
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
Hi all, this is my latest Milky Way timelapse taken with Pentax K5 + Samyang 8mm FE lens. Hope you guys like it.
















Youtu.be



Forum: Post Your Photos! 07-02-2013, 07:57 AM  
Night Calling for Orion
Posted By lotech
Replies: 1
Views: 948
Nice try ! Orion is the brightest constellation I know of, please keep your light on :)
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 03-31-2013, 11:04 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By smigol
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
I haven't done a widefield shot in a long while and I went after this combined target last month.

Used a Pentax SMC TAKUMAR/6x7 1:4/200mm lens with adapter to fit the Pentax K10D camera. IDAS LPS P2 filter on the lens with a Baader Ha filter inside the adapter. I'd tried using just the LPS filter on the lens, but too much unfocused IR was ruining the image, leading to myriad red and orange rings around the stars. I used the second filter to limit the passed wavelength to just the Ha region, allowing tighter focus of the nebula and stars.

This is from a stack of six-1200 second subframes stacked using Pix Insight. I had to extract the red channel and reduce the size of the image by 50% to remove bayer artifacts.


Gull to Thor Widefield by S Migol, on Flickr

In the end, I'm pleased with how it turned out. I learned a lot about how these lenses focus light and what wavelengths manage to get through the filters.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 02-17-2013, 05:09 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By Stone G.
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
You can easily make a bracket for yourself. For example something like this:



Then you can use a red dot finder or a finder/spotting scope as you please. Just be aware that your bracket is made of non-magnetic material. I discovered the hard way that the O-GPS1's compass is very sensitive to such local disturbances.
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 02-05-2013, 01:12 AM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By VisualDarkness
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
That's super-cool! There is so much in that shot.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 01-20-2013, 11:22 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By smigol
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
More from my aging K10D in the back yard.

We had more than a week of great, clear, cold winter weather. Night temperatures dropped below freezing which is rare for my area of California. After 6 nights of letting the camera do its thing, I stacked up the results and here they are:


IC 443 Jellyfish Nebula by S Migol, on Flickr

This is from 162 individual frames stacked for 27 hours of integration.

I'm getting hooked on letting the camera gather data from the comfort of home. This has kept me from going out to the field where I probably would have gotten as good data in one night vs 6. Right now I have the ease of lots of time between twilights. Once summer comes I'll be dragging myself out to the dark sky sites.
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 08-27-2012, 10:23 PM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By jbinpg
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
Holy crap, Josh !! Love that Orion shot. Venus and Jupiter just overpower everything else. Orion can only be seen before dawn this time of year so I assume you were up very early or you stayed up really late :)
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 07-21-2012, 02:49 AM  
No more tests! just pictures
Posted By fs999
Replies: 8,071
Views: 1,469,707
Excellent olentz !

Click on the photos for details...



















Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 07-03-2012, 12:20 PM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By Dr_who
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
Picture I took with Pentax K5 last week. It is of M27 (Dumbbell Nebula)

The image is 9 x 5 minute exposures stacked. Some obvious coma distortion on the sides of the picture. I have a coma corrector ordered, but its out of stock till late july :( This was shot within the city limits and on a light pollution map is White/Red as far as darkness rating goes. Can usually only see the brightest constellations in the sky.
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 06-03-2012, 07:33 PM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By jbinpg
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
Thanks for that, Josh. Was too cloudy to catch that one here. Very nice vid.

Jack
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 04-23-2012, 06:42 PM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By XLXW
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
Hi all:
This is a most interesting and useful thread. I have a new Pentax digital camera and I intend to use it with my astronomy gear.
Best regards to all.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 04-06-2012, 12:38 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By pixelsaurus
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
Good first effort. Keep practising as there is a Transit of Venus June 6. Next one will not be until well into next century.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 04-05-2012, 08:43 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By zambonikane
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
Thanks for the compliments! I too had some issues with DSS at first and wasted a lot of really good nights of data by not really knowing what I was trying to accomplish (not taking darks or flats), but I have gotten better at it as I progressed. I have only been imaging through the scope since September and can try to outline the things I have learned in the time since then.
1. Spend a lot to time over at cloudy nights going through the "Beginning and Intermediate Imaging" and "DSLR and digital camera astro imaging and processing" forums.
2. Spend that $2k on a mount (I have an Atlas and love it).
3. Find a teacher or student to get you Photoshop (I'm a teacher and pulled the trigger during a pricing screw up so I landed CS5.5 for $45!)
4. Search for online tutorials (like this one -Enterprise Astronomy & Photography | Videos)
5. Learn EQmod (an open source mount control suite which allow you to sync a planetarium program to your scope and replaces the hand control).
6. Pick up a guide scope.

I do not have a permanent set up, so each time I want to image, I have to lug the mount, scope, and camera out of the garage. Here is an outline of a typical night:
At dusk:
-Bring mount to driveway and roughly align with north (if I can see it, I'll roughly align with Polaris)
-Level tripod - I use the bubble level on my iPhone placed on my accessories try. Once I am close, I shim the short leg with paint stirs.
-Balance scope
-Connect scope to net book
-Open Eqmod
-Open Carts du Ciel
-Open PhD Guiding software
-Go through the polar alignment technique outlined here (














You Tube



) and here
-Using Carts du Ciel, I choose some bright stars/planets to slew to in order for eqmod to build an accurate model of the night sky and to align my finder and guide scope with my main imaging scope.
-Concurrently with the above step, I will hone my focus on a bright star by powering up my K-x (in debug mode in order to disable dark frame subtraction) (which basically lives connected (prime focally) to my scope), clicking on live view, then moving the scope to center my target in the view finder, then zooming up to 10x then fine tuning the location of my target, then adjusting focus so that the stars are as small as possible and I get good spike (only with reflectors). - I think my English teachers would give me heck for that last step, but hopefully you get the just
-Choose my imaging target in Carts du Ciel, but I don't go right to it just yet. I pick three stars that form a triangle that encompasses my target, and have Cart du Ciel slew to each, center the scope, sync, repeat for all three, just so that the computer has the best possible model of the sky.
-Slew to my target.
-Within the PhD guiding software, calibrate the mount (the software sends signals to the mount and reads how the image in the guide camera responds) - this takes about 15 minutes.
-While PhD is calibrating itself to my mount, I set up a folder that is named after my target and the temperature (Ex M51 45degs). Within that folder, I create 4 sub-folders - lights, darks, bias, and flats.
-I open PK tether and set up my shooting and saving settings. I have it name my files after my target, the ISO and the exposure length (ex: M51iso800-300s001).
-Once my mount and guide scope are synced, I take one exposure with my settings just to see if my focus is good and I don't have too much light pollution.
-If everything looks hunky-dory, I let PK tether rip and go inside while I am taking my lights.
-Fast Forward a couple of hours, I lug the whole set up in and disconnect everything but my camera from the netbook.
-I cover the scope with the cap, set up PK tether to dump the next batch for files I'm about to take into the folder I labeled "darks."
-Let PK tether rip (now taking pictures of the back of my lens cap in my dark garage) making sure that the temp has not changed much (+/-3 or 4 degrees max) at the same iso and shutter speed.
-The next day at dusk I replace the batteries, stretch a white t-shirt over the opening in my scope and take a (20-30) of flat frames with the scope pointed at about 90deg away from the sun (I hope this goes without saying, but DO NOT POINT YOUR SCOPE AT THE SUN WITHOUT A SOLAR FILTER - you will damage your camera). These basically allows DSS to account for vignetting and sensor dust. These have to be at the same iso, but at a shutter speed long enough to push the histogram about a third to a half way out from the left edge (usually well under a second if the sun is still above the horizon). These will be saved in the "Flats" folder.
- I then take a bunch(10-20) of bias frames (same iso, but the shortest shutter speed possible). These get saved in the "Bias" folder.
-If you have not rotated your camera, or done anything that my have removed or added dust to your camera since your last imaging session, you can reuse these flats and bias frames - that's what I do and have not have had a problem. When I used flats that I took with a different t-adapter, I get some weird vignetting.

Now on to processing:
-open DSS
-Click on add light frames
-Select all of the files in the "lights" folder
-Click on add dark frames
-Select all of the files in the "darks" folder
-Click on add flat frames
-Select all of the files in the "flats" folder
-Click on add Bias/dark flats frames
-Select all of the files in the "Bias" folder
-Click on "check all" on the left hand side
-Click on "register checked pictures"
-This will open a dialogue box
-The only thing I change on this is what % of light frames do I want to stack - I use 80%, but if all of your frames look good, adjust accordingly.
-I then click on the advanced tab, then adjust the slider so that DSS detects somewhere in the ball park of 50 or so stars. Use your judgement.
-I then click on the stacking parameters tab and will adjust the result tab to mosaic.
-I then click on the lights tab and select median kappa-sigma clipping (I don't know why I choose this one, but the DSS guide explains the difference.
-I click "Ok"
-I click "Ok"
-I surf over to cloudynights.com, or pentaxforums.com while my image stacks.
-When it is done, I will adjust the color sliders (usually only the middle triangle of each color) so that they overlap, and click the linked settings check box to move the colored histogram over to the steep part of the curve (more to the left side of the steep part than the right side).
-I will then click on the saturation tab and set it to about 15-17.
-I then click apply settings and let it do its magic.
-*This is not your final image, just a jumping of point* I usually aim for an image with a very bright back ground.
-I will now click "save picture to file" and save it to the same folder that my 4 sub folders are in with a descriptive name.
-I then open this file in Photoshop and adjust curves, levels, saturation, and contrast. I find numerous small swings are better than one or two big swings for any particular attribute. I recently purchased Noel Carboni's AstroActions which offers a number of useful astronomy related Photoshop actions.
-When I am happy, or feel like I am beginning to do more harm than good with a picture, I will save it as a JPEG, and a new TIF file, being sure that I can still access my original file as it came out of DSS.

I hope this helps and if anyone needs clarification on any of the steps, please let me know, I would be happy to help!
Mike
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 03-26-2012, 09:10 PM  
No more tests! just pictures
Posted By derekkite
Replies: 8,071
Views: 1,469,707
Great shots of the moon and planets. I was without my camera when I saw it, a beautiful clear sky, the crescent moon and two planets.
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 12-07-2011, 08:30 AM  
K-5 For Astrophotography
Posted By telfish
Replies: 1,131
Views: 347,913
Over the last year I have been trying to build a setup to do deep sky imaging. This is the first quick and dirty image from my K5.

It shows the Andromeda galaxy M31. This is the largest apparent galaxy and is about 5 full moon widths wide. it's just about naked eye visible from a dark site. Distance from earth 2,5000,000 light years and contains over a trillion stars. It was taken using my Celestron C11 scope with a hyperstar attachment taken at F2 and around 560 mm focal length.

This is just one 30 second exposure and is not stacked. I just did my best in photoshop and lightroom to bring out the details. This image shows the inner brighter part of the galaxy, you can just make out the faint outer areas and the dark dust lanes, a multiple stacked image will bring out those fainter areas. There was a bright moon washing out this part of the sky and I have some light pollution where I live, so I can do much better than this. Will post another better try when I get a decent night.
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 03-14-2012, 02:45 AM  
No more tests! just pictures
Posted By fs999
Replies: 8,071
Views: 1,469,707
Thank you Arizona Dave and cwhans !
Wonderful Orion GWarmachine !
Nice shot ozlizard !
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 03-13-2012, 07:14 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By smigol
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
OK, since we're looking at Orion, here's mine from Dec 24, 2011:



Image details: An extensive rework of this set of images from Dec 24, 2011 at Montebello OSP.
Taken with my full-spectrum modified Pentax K10D camera using the Stellarvue SV4.
Guided with PHD using the Orion SSAG on a SV70ED. Sitting on a Losmandy GM-8 that I've recently upgraded with the OPW and high precision gear.

Stacked with DSS using:
Stacking step 1 ->2 frames (ISO: 100) - total exposure: 1 mn 56 s
Stacking step 2 ->6 frames (ISO: 100) - total exposure: 11 mn 54 s
Stacking step 3 ->3 frames (ISO: 100) - total exposure: 15 mn 0 s
Stacking step 4 ->1 frames (ISO: 100) - total exposure: 10 mn 2 s

Processed with PixInsight. DBE, 50 iterations of Masked Stretch to .09 median value and then another 50 to .1 value. Slight histogram stretch to tweak. Exported to LR3 where I did final touchup.

This one made it into the Pentax Photo Gallery.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 01-22-2012, 10:22 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By cadmus
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
Yeah. When i can not recharge and weight is an issue that is the brand and model i use. Lithium Ultimates. They last a long time and they don't heat up much. I frequently am on trips where i have no access to electricity for a month at a time. I normally leave on a trip with a bunch of those and then have to buy alkaine AAs if those run out. It is nice being able to BUY batteries in any shop in any country. When will the other manufacturers catch on to this?
Forum: Sold Items 12-10-2011, 11:58 PM  
For Sale - Sold: Pentax-A* 300mm f/2.8 $1900US
Posted By rvannatta
Replies: 33
Views: 9,846


You can use it pretty easily with a monopod. This is a shot of a Big horn sheep east of St. George, Utah using a monopod
and a 1.4x-L converter taken a few years ago with my K10. It works fairly well actually. I took this snapshot in 2008 when I was headed
east out of St. George heading toward the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Head a chance encounter withh a herd of sheep along the road and soon found myself running out among the rocks looking for a vantage point, sort of like the guys in the wild west movies, except I had this lens on a monopod with a 1x4x-L converter and a K10 instead of a Winchester.
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 01-15-2012, 03:00 PM  
No more tests! just pictures
Posted By fs999
Replies: 8,071
Views: 1,469,707
Superb astro-shots GWARmachine !
Wonderful snow-shots ogl !
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 01-15-2012, 06:03 AM  
No more tests! just pictures
Posted By dadipentak
Replies: 8,071
Views: 1,469,707
How very cool!
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 01-14-2012, 11:11 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By Docrwm
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
SSgt., Really like the second one a lot!
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 01-07-2012, 10:27 PM  
No more tests! just pictures
Posted By jsherman999
Replies: 8,071
Views: 1,469,707
One of the best running image threads on the forum. Bravo, all.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 11-28-2011, 10:54 PM  
Astrophotography
Posted By bossa
Replies: 1,248
Views: 317,100
Amazing photo GWM! What's the name of that tracking mount you use again?
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