View allAll Photos Tagged autostakkert

Morning of 22nd November 2021 (about 0700-0730). Stacked image taken from best 1200 frames out of 1500 on an Olympus OMD EM10 III attached to Altair 72ED scope on an AZ-GTI mount. PIPP, Autostakkert, GIMP. Stourbridge UK. Clear skies in midlands too good to miss. Onthe Oly turned OFF stabilization. Aperture priority.

Full disk taken through 72ED with Coronado Solarmax 40 and BF10 filter set and QHY5III178M

Two 1000 frame SER files recorded using Firecapture (one for solar disk and the other overexpose for the prominence's)

Stacked in Autostakkert 3 and using layers in PS CS2 to combine the two images,moved to Astrosurface to sharpen and then once again into PS CS2 to process.

Second image taken through my 80mm f/7.5 achromat with Lunt pressure tuned module from the 50THa and double stacked with Solarmax II 60 richview etalon and again with the 178M This image is a two pane mosaic showing the area of AR 2978. two 1000 frame SER files again recorded using Firecapture,stacked in AS3 and mosaic stitched using PS CS2 and sharpened in Astrosurface and back to PS to process.

03.06.2015 07:20:35 MSK

 

Ungodly quick grab of the thing I haven't yet seen.

Calling for experts - is this an emerging flux region?

 

DMK23U274 via 2x Barlow lens on Coronado PST over Celestron CG-4 motorized. 20% of 600 frames stacked in Autostakkert!2, deconvolved and wavelet sharpened in AstraImage PRO 3.0. Arranged in Photoshop.

ZWO ASI290MM

TeleVue NP101is/2.5x PM

Losmandy G11

 

Captured 1000 frames with FireCapture

Stacked best 50% with Autostakkert!

Wavelet sharpened in Registax

Finished in Photoshop

Earth-orbiting satellites detected an X1.1-class solar flare from sunspot AR3217 on Feb. 11th @ 1548 UTC. (upper right). These images were taken a few hours after the event.

 

Although this X1-class solar flare attracted all the attention, it did not produce a CME (coronal mass ejection). Five hours before the X-flare, a filament of magnetism erupted from the sun's northern hemisphere and hurled a CME into space. This produced the G1 aurora show last night (2023-02-14)

 

Three versions of the same image each provide different views of the solar surface. Black and white (native), inverted black and white, and false colour.

 

Best 12% of 1,000 frames.

 

Equipment details:

Orion 80mm refractor

Quark Chromosphere filter

ZWO2600MM Pro using ROI

Processed in Autostakkert, IMPPG and Photoshop

Moon taken with a Canon 200D and a Canon 55-250mm IS STM.

Software used:

Autostakkert 3 (for stacking the images)

Photoshop 2020 (Adobe Camera Raw, for editing)

Mars at 19:23 UT, 05/12/2020. Poor seeing conditions tonight. 7.5 minutes worth of data, the result of merging 3 files in Winjupos, each the best 4,000 of 20,000 frames, resized 150%. Captured using Firecapture V2.5. Processed using Autostakkert V 3.1.4 , Registax V6 and Winjupos. Equipment used, Celestron C14 Edge HD, CGEPRO Mount, ZWO ASI224MC camera and Carl Zeiss 2 X Barlow.

Taken with a Skywatcher ED80 Refractor and a Canon 600D just after sunset

Equipo: MAK 102 - Star Adventurer - Canon 60D - Video RAW Magic Lantern

Procesado: MLV DUMP - PIPP - AutoStakkert/3 - Adobe Photoshop y Lightroom

 

Saturn 11th Oct 2025, 22:08 UT. This image is made up of 13 stacks of the best 3,000 frames from 12,000 frame AVI's de rotated within Winjupos. Captured using Firecapture V2.7, Processed using Autostakkert V4, ,Registax V6 and Winjupos. Equipment used, Celestron C14 Edge HD, CGEPRO Mount, ZWO ASI224MC camera, Carl Zeiss 2X Barlow and ZWO ADC.

SW 200PDS

ZWO ASI120MC

HEQ5 PRO

 

Processed in PIPP, autostakkert 2, registax 6

Saturn

 

Best 5% of 4.5k Frames

 

Video here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Hzej46U2HM&ab_channel=stormlv

 

---Hardware---

 

Mount : Skywatcher AZ-EQ-6 GT

Camera : ZWO Camera ASI 224 M

Tube : Celestron 11 EDGE HD

Focal length : 2800 mm

Aperture : ~ F/10

Barlow : Televue Powermate 4x

Effective focal length : 11200 mm

Effective aperture : ~ F/40

 

---Software---

 

Acquired with FireCapture

Stacked with AutoStakkert

Processed with Lightroom & Topaz Denoise

 

Taken with a AZ4 mounted Skywatcher ED100 Refractor using a Baader Astrosolar Filter with a Canon 60D at prime focus. 12 images stacked using Autostakkert 2

Taken with a Canon T3i DSLR and TMB92L refractor, using the following settings: f/5.5 1/800 s and ISO 100. This is the result of 13 images stacked with AutoStakkert! and processed with Astra Image Pro and Adobe Photoshop CS6.

Clavius crater is a visual treat in any angle of sunlight, but in this waning phase the rugged terrain is nicely enhanced. According to Kaguya data, it has a diameter of 152 miles, a depth of just over 2 miles. It is the 3rd largest crater on the visible near side of the Moon, and due to the curvature of the Moon, the floor of Clavius has a convex shape, and if you were lucky enough to be standing near the center of the crater, you may not be able to see the far crater walls that would be below the horizon. The sequentially diminishing arc of craters that extend across the floor of Clavius is unmistakable, and it begins on the southeast rim with Rutherford crater (34 miles), then Clavius D (16 miles), C (12 miles), N (8 miles), J (7 miles), and lastly JA (5 miles). Notice the remnant of a central mountain range between Clavius C and N. There are also some 30+ smaller craters that speckle the floor of Clavius. The crater is named after a 16th-century German mathematician, astronomer and Jesuit Priest, Christopher Clavius, and is one of the oldest formations on the lunar surface. It is believed to have been formed around 4 billion years ago during the Nectarian period.

 

Just to the West of Clavius is Blancanus Crater, and has a diameter of 72.7 miles. It’s lava-filled floor appears flat and smooth.

 

This final re-process is the best 35% of 2000 captured frames stacked with Autostakkert.

Camera=ASI120MC-S

Telescope=Celestron CPC800 XLT

Shorty 2X Barlow.

 

Kaguya flyover approaching from the South -

www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7bvXmOhyC0

This is my best photo of Mars so far. It shows the 'Red Planet' at opposition in Jul 2018 when it was 0.39 AU (58 million Km - it's closest to Earth for 15 years.

 

The image was captured using a QHY5-III 290C camera attached to a Sky-Watcher SkyMax 180 Pro with a Tele Vue 2x PowerMate, mounted on a Celestron Evolution mount. It is the result of the best 20% of 2000 frames, captured using SharpCap 3.1 Pro, stacked using AutoStakkert 2 and processed using Registax 6 and PhotoShop CC.

Just four hours after the April full Moon at 2018-04-30 04:39UT from Austin, Texas. Questar 1350/89mm telescope and Sony a6300 camera at prime focus. Exposed for 1/60 sec at ISO 100. Best 8 of 200 images stacked in Autostakkert 3, deconvolved in Lynkeos, with final crop and exposure in Photoshop.

106_1584-6 processed with PIPP and AutoStakkert.

A cylindrical projection of the previous image, giving a clearer view of the multi-ringed structure of the Mare Orientale impact basin.

 

This was compiled using WinJupos, the same software I used to make the Mars 2020 map.

104_9879-81 4K MP4s processed with PIPP and AutoStakkert

Jupiter captured with a Mewlon 210 and Player One camera. Autostakkert and Registax for processing, fair seeing.

Sol en color iinvertido.

 

Lunt Ls35THa

QHY Img132e

Vixen Polarie

EzPlanetary

Autostakkert.

Registax

Fitswork

Cs6

LR

255 frames

 

Mexico CDMX

104_9332-6 4K MP4s processed with PIPP and AutoStakkert

LATEST VERSION: flic.kr/p/2oHFL6m

 

Jupiter, the largest planet in the Solar System, about 3 weeks after its 2022 opposition. The Great Red Spot, visible in the southwest, is a giant storm with a diameter larger than Earth. Wind speeds in the storm peak at 268 mph (432 km/h).

 

This is one of my top 3 Jupiter images from the 2022 season. Using this 6" SCT with a planetary camera is so much fun, and the results are shocking to me. I could have never imagined getting images this sharp when I started this hobby back in 2018!

 

Phase angle: 4.05°

Apparent magnitude: -2.90

Apparent diameter: 49.20"

Distance from Earth: 4.007 AU

 

Stack of ~4,500 frames (best 25% of 18,000)

Captured from 04:20 to 04:23 UTC 10/15/22

Exposure 10 ms, Gain 250, Offset 25

 

Location: Summerville/Ladson, SC

Atmospheric seeing: 4/5 to 5/5

Camera: ZWO ASI224MC

Telescope: Celestron C6 Schmidt-Cassegrain Telescope

Barlow: Tele Vue 2x 1.25" Barlow (gives an effective focal length of 3404mm at f/22.7)

Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G (unguided)

Captured with FireCapture

Processed with AutoStakkert! 3 (with 3x drizzle), PixInsight, and GIMP

Amas d'hercule M13 au newton 400 + caméra Zwo ASI224MC en lucky imaging (environ 800 poses de 500ms soit moins de 8minutes cumulée!

empilement autostakkert3 et finitions sous photoshop

4.7% illuminated!

 

Skywatcher 120ED (F=1800mm)

ZWO ASI120MC

 

AutoStakkert

PixInsight

1000 frames captured, best 200 frames stacked using AutoStakkert AS!3. Post Processed with Photoshop CC 2017.

Telescope:Altair Astro 72mm f/6 EDR LightWave refractor 432mm focal length.

Camera: Altair IMX178 colour Hypercam.

Mounted on a SkyWatcher AZ-GTI goto mount.

The moon as seen on the evening of October 12, 2016 using a Stellarvue SV80ST2 telescope with a 2X barlow and a QHY5-III 178C camera.

 

Image processing performed with Autostakkert!, Registax, and Photoshop CC2015.

 

This photo is best viewed at full size (1872 x 2048 pixels) or against a dark background (press the "L" key to enter the Flickr light box and/or click on the image to get full zoom).

 

All rights reserved.

I shot about 15000 frames of UHD video using my Panasonic 100-300mm F/4.0-5.6 on my G7. I cropped and registered the frames and subtracted a master dark frame (made from about 30 seconds of video with the lens cap on) from each using PiPP.

 

I stacked the best half of the frames using Autostakkert, and had that program use its implementation of the Drizzle method to upsample the final image to 1.5x the size of the original frames. Some final adjustments were made in Lightroom.

 

Of the three moon images uploaded tonight, I think this one looks the best.

Taken with a William Optics 70mm refractor and 2x Barlow on an EQ5 Pro mount. 300 images shot in RAW, converted into TIFFs then the best 80% stacked using Autostakkert! 2. Image processed in Lightroom, Registax 6, Photoshop CS2 and Fast Stone Image Viewer

Distance from Earth 724,028,000 km

127 mm SCT @ f12

Neximage 5 @ 1.4 mp

Stack of 200/400 frames per exposure in AutoStakkert 2

2 exposure combined in GiMP 2.8

Seeing was 2/5, Temperature -10 c

View Original size, please. In main window image may suffer from aliasing.

 

Taken in pretty unfavourable conditions - 13° above horizont with clouds rolling in.

150 mm of aperture and almost 4 meters of focal length had made a big diference, if compared to 110/2070 mm scope.

As I know, the Polar cap on Mars melts at "summer" and the ice recesses at a pace of a running man - 6 kph. So in one week it can shrink dramatically.

 

Aquisition time (start of the session) : JD2456746,3319213 (29.03.3014 22:57:58 MSK).

Image orientation: scrambled

Equipment:

Canon EOS 60D (unmodded) coupled to Celestron OMNI XLT 150 mm f/5 Newtonian reflector via 5x Barlow and mounted on SkyWatcher NEQ-6 Pro mount.

Aperture 150 mm

Native focal length 750 mm

Effective focal length 3750 mm

Tv = 1/50 seconds

Av (effective) = f/25

ISO 1600

Exposures: 33% of 3000+ (1 minute of acqusition)

Processing: .MOV 2 .AVI via SUPER, Autostakkert!2, Photoshop to align cahnnels and kill atmospheric dispersion, deconvolution in AstraImage 3.0 (Richardson-Lucy algorithm, Cauchy type PSF, size 2,1 units, 8 iterations).

Back to Photoshop for leveles and curves .

This monster is just around the corner and ready to face Earth. It has been very active. Just hope it doesn't sneeze and fries our telecom satellites. Still doesn't have a denomination it should be AR????.

6 inch SCT and ASI120MM camera. 3000 frames stacked in Autostakkert and Wavelets in Registax.

 

Image composite de 3 panneaux.

- Matériel : Skywatcher Mak127, Zwo ASI 485MC, Perl EQ3-2 motorisée.

- Prises de vues : 3 vidéos en pleine taille de capteur (3840x2160) de 1000 images.

- Traitement :

- PIPP : extraction du canal vert de chaque session.

- Autostakkert : empilement des 50 meilleures images de chaque session en ressample x2.

- Registax : traitement ondelettes de chaque panneau.

- Photoshop : alignement et intégration des 3 panneaux.

Best 33% of 4,000 captured frames processed with Autostakkert, Registax 6, Photoshop CC 2015.

 

Still waiting for that night of pristine seeing conditions.

 

FireCapture v2.4 Settings

------------------------------------

Camera=ZWO ASI120MC-S with Shorty 2X Barlow

Telescope=Celestron CPC800 XLT

Filter=RGB

Profile=Saturn

Diameter=17.59"

Magnitude=0.34

FocalLength=5150mm

Resolution=0.15"

Date=07/18/2015

Frames captured=4000

File type=AVI

Extended AVI mode=true

Binning=no

ROI=480x320

FPS (avg.)=10

Shutter=93.85ms

Gain=77

Histogramm=74%

Sensor temperature=32.0 °C

 

Sunspot AR2740 fading away.

 

Session Information :

* 51° N 3° E

* Torhout, Belgium

* Capture Date : 12.05.2019

* Surface Capture Start : 13:00:04 UTC

* Surface Capture Mid : 13:00:20 UTC

* Surface Capture End : 13:00:36 UTC

 

Object Information

* Type : Sunspot

* Designation : AR2470

* Distance : 1.010 AU or roughly 151.1 million km

 

Hardware

* Mount : Celestron CGX

* Imaging Scope : TS Optics 152mm f/5.9 Achromat

* ERF : Baader 2" UV/IR Cut

* Filter : Daystar Quark Hydrogen-Alpha (Chromosphere)

* Imaging Camera : ZWO ASI 174MM

 

Exposure Settings

* Exposure : 6ms

* Gain : 0

* Gamma : 25

* Frames Surface : 4.000

* Frames Surface Stacked : 10% (400)

 

Capture Software

* FireCapture

 

Processing Software

* AutoStakkert!

* RegiStax

* Adobe Photoshop

* Topaz DeNoise AI

10 June 2019

 

Partially Cloudy.

 

Transparency (2/5)

Seeing (2.5/5)

 

C9.25 Edge HD, F=4700mm (2x barlow)

ZWO 120MC-S

Winjupos

AutoStakkert

 

The lunar terminator, the division between daylight and darkness enters the frame from left center and ascends to a peak. The lunar limb, where the sunlit moon meets the darkness of space, enters the frame from right center and meets the terminator at the peak. The region around the intersection of the terminator and the limb is the north polar region.

 

Craters named Peary and Byrd, terrestrial polar explorers, occupy this region. Mare Frigoris is the flat, dark plain that spans the lower right corner of the image.

 

ZWO ASI178MC

Meade LX850 (12" f/8)

Losmandy G11

 

2000 frames captured in Firecapture

Best 60% of frames stacked in Autostakkert

Wavelet sharpening in Registax

Finished in Photoshop

October the 3rd at 1am.

 

Small miracle tonight, after Alex's passage and 36mm of rain all day, the sky suddenly cleared. I took the opportunity to make a quick portrait of our wonderful satellite.

 

Nikon z7 Tamron G2 150-600 Tcx20 1200mm f/13 160iso 1/250 100 frames with Autostakkert + Registax + Darktable.

 

#themoon #moon #lune #moonlovers #moonlight #sky #astrophotographie #astrophotography #astrophoto @astronogeek #astronogeek #nikon #z7 #tamron #1200mm #tcx20 #nantes #registax #autostakkert #darktable

Taken with a Canon T3i DSLR and TMB92L refractor, using the following settings: f/5.5 1/500 s and ISO 200. This is the result of 29 images stacked with AutoStakkert! and processed with Astra Image Pro and Adobe Photoshop CS6.

This image is an exploration of what can be done with a conventional camera lens and not a telescope. I restacked the data from the previous image in Autostakkert with a 1.5 drizzle to squeeze a bit more resolution from it.

 

Sony a6300 with Nikkor 300mm f/4.5 AI-s lens with 1.4x teleconverter shot at f/11 for 1/30 sec

Best 16 of 65 images stacked with 1.5x drizzel in Autostakkert 3, deconvolved in Lynkeos with final exposure and crop in Photoshop

Austin, Texas on 2019-07-10 00:44 UT.

Sol Regiones Activas 13006, 13004, 13001 y 12999

Buen seeing y algo de viento (poco pero muy tocapelotas)

 

Telescopio: Refractor Bresser Messier Acro 102/460 f4.5

Cámara: ZWO ASI178MM

Montura: iOptron AZ Mount Pro

Filtros: - Baader Neutral Density Filter 1¼" (ND 0.6, T=25%)

- Baader K-Line Filter 1¼" (double stacked) (394nm)

Accesorios: - Baader 2" Cool-Ceramic Safety Herschel Prism

Software: FireCapture, AutoStakkert, Registax y Photoshopp

Fecha: 2022-05-05 (5 de mayo de 2022)

Hora: 15:31 T.U. (Tiempo universal)

Lugar: 42.615 N -6.417 W (Bembibre Spain)

Vídeo: 1 minuto

Resolución: 3096x2080

Gain: 42 (8%)

Exposure: 0.032ms

Frames: 1225

Frames apilados: 49%

FPS: 20

Sensor temperature= 42.8°C

Stacked 4 x 1 minute 4K movies with PIPP and AutoStakkert.

 

104_6198 - 104_6201

Shot from Joshua Tree, CA - 30% illuminated. I usually do not shoot with the Nikon D80 through the telescope, but there wasn't much to do while waiting for the Moon to set this night, other than photograph the Moon.

 

The following maria are present in the photo:

Mare Crisium

Mare Tranquillitatis

Mare Serenitatis

Mare Nectaris

Mare Fecunditatis

 

The terminator falls across the craters Eudoxus and Aristoteles in the north.

 

This is a stack of 11 images shot with the D80 through a Celestron Edge HD 9.25" scope at f/10 and ISO 400. Each frame was 1/200 s. 14 frames were put together in VitrualDub, and AutoStakkert 2 was used to combine the best 11 of those. Final processing in both PixInsight and PS CS 5.1.

PST Coronado

ZWO ASI120MM

Eq5 Synscan

 

2 Tomas en tesela vertical, cada una:

Frames: 1000

Frames Apilados: 500

Df: 400 mm.

F: 10

 

Captura: Firecapture

Procesado: Autostakkert + Registax + Fitsworks + Ps

 

Guillermo Cervantes Mosqueda

Observatorio Astronómico Altaír

Daytime Jupiter. 2 hours after sunrise (about 25 deg above horizon - west)

 

Skywatcher 120ED (F=1800mm)

ZWO ASI120MC

  

AutoStakkert

PixInisight

Saturn taken on 13th June, two days before coming into opposition. I wasn't going to process this originally because I accidentally left the gain on the camera turned all the way up and I thought I'd spoiled the shot but it turned out to be the best of a series of shots taken as an experiment to find the ideal settings to image Saturn with the Skywatcher Explorer 150 PDS which has a much shorter focal length than I'm used to. For this image a Barlow lens was used but also another Barlow tube with the lens removed to give the longest extension available in order to maximise the image size. Not only did it work, I think it's the best Saturn image I've managed to get so far.

 

The best 75% from 2 x 1000 frame videos of different exposures.

 

Captured with FireCapture

Processed in AutoStakkert, Registax and Photoshop

 

Equipment:

Sky-Watcher Explorer-150PDS

Skywatcher EQ5 Mount

ZWO ASI120 MC imaging camera

x2 Barlow

Luna de perigeo 19 de febrero.

 

Visionking 80mm triplet ed

Risingcam ar0130

Mosaico de 4 teselas.

 

Autostakkert, registax y Pixinsight

1 2 ••• 56 57 59 61 62 ••• 79 80