Astrophotography
Welcome to !astrophotography!
We are Lemmy's dedicated astrophotography community!
If you want to see or post pictures of space taken by amateurs using amateur level equipment, this is the place for you!
If you want to learn more about taking astro photos, check out our wiki or our discord!
Please read the rules before you post! It is your responsibility to be aware of current rules. Failure to be aware of current rules may result in your post being removed without warning at moderator discretion.
Rules
- I | Real space images only.
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Astrophotography refers to images of astronomical objects or phenomena exclusively.
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~~Images that show objects or people below the Kármán Line (100km) will be removed.~~ We won't be enforcing this rule for now, but as the community grows eventually we will split and have a separate space for just landscape astro.
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Images must be an accurate representation of a real astronomical object.
- II | Original and Amateur Content Only
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Image posts can only be images that you have captured and processed yourself, or discussion about capturing and/or processing your own images.
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Images acquired from public sources, professional observatories, or other professional services are not allowed.
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If you have done a drastic alteration or reprocessing of a prior submission, you may repost your edit - but only after a minimum of one week has passed.
- III | Post Types
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Image posts are to link directly to the image, not to landing pages, personal galleries, blogs, or professional sites. Link to these in the comments. (AstroBin and Imgur, are allowed)
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Questions are welcome here for the time being.
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Links to blogs, articles or external websites should be interesting and promote discussion about amateur astrophotography.
- IV | Titles
- All image posts should just include include the name of the object being photographed. Extra info such as equipment, it being your first image, or other information should go in a comment along with your acquisition info. Please see this page for more details.
If your post is removed, try reposting with a different title. Don't hesitate to message the mods if you still have questions!
- V | Acquisition and Processing Information
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All submitted images must include acquisition and processing details as a top-level comment. All posts without this information may be given a warning, and if not updated will be removed.
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This includes the telescope, mount, camera, accessories, and any other pieces of equipment you used to capture the image.
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You must also include processing details, i.e. the programs you used and a general rundown of the workflow/processes you used within those programs. “Processed in Photoshop” is not enough.
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This target has always been a goal of mine since starting in this hobby. While the Flying Nebula (aka Sh2-129, all the red stuff), the Squid Nebula (aka OU4, the blue stuff) was only discovered in 2011. It's stupidly faint. Because of this, and my horrible light pollution, I had to get a ton of exposure time to bring it out, and ended up getting 110 hours total time on it. This is a combination of images taken through hydrogen-alpha and oxygen-iii filters for the nebulosity, plus RGB filters for true-color stars (the nebulosity is kinda close to true color). I have no clue why the Ha region is called 'the flying bat', but the Oiii structure sure looks like a squid alright.
Captured over a shitload of nights from September to December, 2023. Broadband data from a Bortle 9 zone.
Places where I host my other images:
Flickr | Instagram
Equipment:
TPO 6" F/4 Imaging Newtonian
Orion Sirius EQ-G
ZWO ASI1600MM-Pro
Skywatcher Quattro Coma Corrector
ZWO EFW 8x1.25"/31mm
Astronomik LRGB+CLS Filters- 31mm
Astrodon 31mm Ha 5nm, Oiii 3nm, Sii 5nm
Agena 50mm Deluxe Straight-Through Guide Scope
ZWO ASI-290mc for guiding
Moonlite Autofocuser
Acquisition: 110 hours 15 minutes (Camera at -15°C)
Ha - 212x600"
Oiii - 428
L - 200x120"
R - 69x60" 69 71 66
G - 71x60"
B - 66x60"
Darks- 30
Flats- 30 per filter
Capture Software:
PixInsight Preprocessing:
BatchPreProcessing
StarAlignment
Blink
ImageIntegration per channel
DrizzleIntegration (2x, Var β=1.5)
Dynamic Crop
DynamicBackgroundExtraction
**Narrowband Linear:
Honestly just StarXterminator and EZ soft stretch to bring them nonlinear.
Duplicated the Oiii before stretching to be used for advanced narrowband combination:
Oiii advaned narrowband combination:
Combine Oiii with Green broadband channel channel (OGG palette)
BackgroundNeutralization
ColorCalibration
StarXterminator to completely remove stars
PixelMath to subtract green continuum spectrum, leaving just Oiii signal
HistogramTransformation to stretch nonlinear
NoiseXterminator + a little concolution
CurvesTransformation to adjust black point/contrast
Clone stamp to remove a couple background artifacts
image saved as 'NB', to be combined later on in nonlinear processing
RGB Linear:
SpectroPhotometricColorCalibration
BlurXTerminator
HSV Repair
StarXterminator to make a stars-only image
ArcsinhStretch + Histogram transformation to bring stars nonlinear
Nonlinear processing:
Background Neutralization
Shitloads of Curve Transformation to adjust lightness, saturation, contrast, hues, etc with various masks
LocalHistogramEqualization
Added in NB image from earlier per the advanced narrowband guide
HistogramTransformation to adjust the black point
More curves
MLT for medium scale noise reduction in the squid
ColorSaturation to slightly desaturate the red nebulas
NoiseXterminator
Even more curves
Pixelmath to add in the stretched stars only image from earlier
Guess what more curves
Another round of NoiseXterminator
MLT for some small scale chrominance noise reduction
Few more slight ColorSaturation adjustments
Resample to 60%
Annotation
The amount of details you've shared about your process is insane. Mad props to you!
And a big shout-out to your tenacity. Spending 110 hours collecting data takes a level of dedication that makes me jealous.
Please accept warmest regards from this internet stranger.