View allAll Photos Tagged deepskystacker
Canon 7D
EF-S 15-85mm @ 15mm
10sec - F3.6 - IS0 1600
Stacked with DeepSkyStacker
22 RAW light frames
10 BIAS frames
Post edited in Photoshop
Monkey Head Nebula or NGC2174. Skywatcher 200p scope, NEQ6 mount, guided.
Unmodified Canon 100d DSLR. 43 x 5 minute images at 800 ISO, 5 x 5 minute Darks, 5 x Biases, 10 Flats stacked by DeepSkyStacker.
My first effort at capturing a deep sky object. Albury cc 14/01/2012 www.astronomy4everyone.org.uk/
300mm Canon zoom lens untracked mount
29 exposures of 3.2s/ISO3200/f5.6 + dark file
Stacked in Deepskystacker
Levels and curves stretched in Photoshop
Montelabro (GR), 08/08/2010 (+08/07 frames)
Transparency: 4/5 (SQM-L 21.20)
Seeing 4/5
Temp: 14°
Takahashi FS60-C F6.2
Canon 350D Baader ACF mod
No LP Filters
12x480sec 800ISO (08/08/10)
8x480sec 800ISO (08/07/10)
11 Dark - 21 Bias - 21 Flat
Guided with PHD Guiding
Magzero Mz5-m+TS OAG9 (08/08/10)
Magzero Mz5-m+Orion Short tube (08/07/10)
Nebulosity, Deepskystacker; Photoshop CS2
Notes: Spike on Upperleft cornet due to OAG prism
I reworked the source files from this image and did a 2x drizzle with a crop in DSS. You can see more about this object at Wikipedia.
Note how the upper right area has some problems with alignment. This was because I wasn't aware of how important doing the drift alignment with all the equipment attached can be. Over the course of the series of exposures, there was field rotation and this appears as blurred stars. Remember, this is a half-size crop of the APS-C sensor. Imagine what it would be like with a Full Frame sensor! Also, the drizzle option seems to have added some strange "rings" around some of the brighter stars.
This is about 1 hour of lights with a ton of darks that have been accumulated over time.
I did a gradient subtraction, histogram stretching, and curves. I didn't see the need to do noise reduction as the image looks pretty good to me at the moment. PP with PixInsight LE.
Taken with the Pentax K10D and the Stellarvue SV4 scope at prime focus.
Here are the DSS settings:
Stacking mode: Custom Rectangle
Alignment method: Automatic
Drizzle x2 enabled
Cosmetic applied to hot pixels (Filter = 1 px, Detection Threshold = 99.0%)
Cosmetic applied to cold pixels (Filter = 1 px, Detection Threshold = 1.0%)
Stacking step 1 ->5 frames (ISO: 1600) - total exposure: 30 mn 4 s
RGB Channels Background Calibration: Yes
Per Channel Background Calibration: No
Method: Median
-> Offset: 24 frames (ISO: 1600) exposure: 1/4000 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
-> Dark: 16 frames (ISO : 1600) exposure: 6 mn 2 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
-> Dark Flat: 72 frames (ISO : 1600) exposure: 1/4000 s
Method:
Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
-> Flat: 24 frames (ISO: 1600) exposure: 1/4000 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Stacking step 2 ->0 frames (ISO: 1600) - total exposure: -
RGB Channels Background Calibration: Yes
Per Channel Background Calibration: No
-> Offset: 24 frames (ISO: 1600) exposure: 1/4000 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
-> Dark: 30 frames (ISO : 1600) exposure: 30 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
-> Dark Flat: 72 frames (ISO : 1600) exposure: 1/4000 s
Method:
Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
-> Flat: 24 frames (ISO: 1600) exposure: 1/4000 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Essa é a região do Cruzeiro do Sul e nebulosa Eta Carinae. É possível ver na imagem além desses, a nebulosa do saco de carvão, próxima ao cruzeiro do sul (tem esse nome devido sua densidade de poeira não permitir a passagem de luz das estrelas que estão atrás), nebulosa da galinha correndo (bem ao centro) e outras, além de vários aglomerados estelares. Tratei esta foto pelo menos 3 vezes antes de chegar em um resultado que gostasse. É uma região difícil por ser muito estrelada, sendo difícil destacar detalhes. Espero que gostem do resultado. Foto tirada no @bregildo_camping , bortle 3.
This is the Crux and Eta Carinae nebula region. In the picture, we can also see the Coalsack Nebula (it has this name because of its gas and dust density, that keeps us from seeing the stars behind it), running chiken nebula (right in the center) and others, and also many star clusters. I processed this image at least three times before get in something that I like. It's a chalenging region because it has many bright stars, so it's difficult to highlight the details. I hope you liked. Picture taken in @bregildo_camping , bortle 3.
Canon T3i astromodified, yongnuo 50mm lens f/8 (I didn't notice ♂️), ISO 800. Guiding with Asiair and ASI290mc with a 50mm finderscope, in a Eq5 Sky-watcher mount and AstroEq mod. 37 Ligth Frames of 240s, 12 darks and 50 bias. 2h28m stacked in total. Processing in Pixinsight.
@sertaoastronomico
#astrophotography #astrofotografia #nightsky #stars #astronomy #astromomia #space #etacarinae #coalsacknebula #crux #CanonT3i #canon600d #dslrmod #Eq5 #skywatcherEq5 #AstroEq #DeepSkyStacker #deepsky #pixinsight #asi290mc #ZwoAsi #zwoasi290mc #longexposure #yn50mm #yongnuo50mm #asiair #guiding #astfotbr
26x 30 second exposures (I shot 42 exposures but the rest were too poor to use due to vibrations in the telescope mount), shot between 10:26pm and 11:36pm, stacked so that the comet, which moves noticeably by the minute is held still in the final image.
- Using the Kappa-Sigma method which removed the stars except for some faint star trail remnants.
7.5inch Maksutov Newtonian telescope F5.3, 1000mm. ISO6400 .. so there's lots of noise in the exposures. I currently have to use a 1.6x barlow lens in the telescope in order to use the camera, until I get the right adapter for this scope. With the barlow, and the camera's crop factor, I was really shooting at F13.5 / 2560mm, so the view is more narrow and dark that it should be. 13 minutes total exposure time.
This image really only shows the core of the comet, the glowing ball of gas and dust around the comet extends out past all the edges of this image.
Comet 103P Hartley is a periodic comet that returns every 6.5 years. It might become visible by eye in October. On this night it had a magnitude of 7.6 and was in the constellation of Casseopia
15/01/2012, Diepenbeek, Belgium
ISO 800 32x120sec lights, 16 darks, 12 flats
Equipment used:
-Skywatcher 200mm F4 Carbon
-HEQ5 Pro mount
-Canon 500D
-Synguider + guidingscope
-Televue Paracorr 2
-TS65-M48a adapter connecting Paracorr 2
-Neodymium filter
-DeepSkyStacker
8 usable lights (60s), 10 darks, 20 flats, 20 bias. Canon EOS 450D DSLR prime focus, ISO1600. Baader Neodymium filter and coma corrector. Sky-Watcher 150P Explorer on EQ3-2 mount. DeepSkyStacker > PixInsight > PhotoShop. The nebulae are false coloured here. Don't look too closely at the stars bottom left—not sure what happened there!!!
Almost 4 hours of inegration, It barely fits on the frame because I didn't check properly the correct rotation at the time of shooting. Very happy with the result anyway, 100% I will shoot agiain next year.
Nikon D500
Skywatcher 72 ED (x0,85 reducer)
Skywatcher HEQ5
ASI Mini guide camera + scope
ASIAIR Plus
Lights: 47x300''
10 Darks
30 Bias
No Flats
Stacked with DeepSkyStacker and processed (poorly) with Photoshop
It turns out that I hit the middle of Scheat!
Here's what can be done in the suburbs of Houston next to Ellington AFB on a overcast night with a Canon 50d and a Canon 70-200 IS f2.8 @ 15 exposures and a tripod.
I was going to try to capture Jupiter, but it was overcast in Jupiter's direction... So I pointed at the only object that I could see in the East Sky with the naked eye. I took 15 x 2 second exposures at ISO 12800 f2.8 and processed them in DeepSkyStacker and Lightroom2.
WOW! The Canon 50D rocks even in the hands of a first time astrophotographer! I never new a dSLR could see soo many stars on a hazy night in the city!
Bonus! I appear to have got lucky and picked up a satellite!
After looking closer, make that 8-10 satellites! Lots of space junk up there these days!
Bumped up the star detection threshold to 50%, and it looks more believable.
Stacked 10 Light frames of f/1.8, 5 sec., ISO-400, 0 step, 28 mm in DeepSkyStacker 3.3.2, converted to 16 bit TIFF in Photoshop CS6, edited in Lr5.
20min total (2x600s@800iso), Chiswick 22/09/14
Altair 115ED/APO, AZ-EQ6, Canon 1100D (modified) CLS filter
BackyardEOS, Deepskystacker, Photoshop CS2
The Pleiades back for the Winter.
This is made from 25 5 minute exposure + 25 2 minute exposures with a Canon EOS 1100D with Astronomik CLS filter.
Stacked in Deep sky stacker and finished in Photoshop CS6.
Taken by Doug Spalding on April 10, 2011 near Butler, Missouri using an SBIG8300C camera mounted on a CGE1100 Telescope using Hyperstar (F/2). This is the sum of 5 of 6 ten minute images, stacked using DeepSkyStacker. The image was then processed with Maxim DL and Photoshop CS2.
With its companion galaxy M110 near the top of the frame. 590 frames at a total time of 9 minutes and 20 seconds.
Poor quality image due to the short exposures, the galaxy itself is at least 50 percent larger than this, but at least the spiral dust lanes are just about visible.
Nikon D3x
400mm f8.0 ISO800
Composit HDR of:
20 x 4 sec
20 x 8 sec
20 x 15 sec
20 x 30 sec
20 x 60 sec
22 x 125 sec
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker 3.3.2
Postprocessing in Photoshop
48 x 600 seconds, ISO 800
Canon 450D (full spectrum mod), Orion 8" f/3.9 Newt
Calibration and post-processing in DeepSkyStacker and Pixinsight
Milky Way Of Hong Kong @ 2016-10-27
Shooting Date/Time : 27/10/2016 19:10
Camera : Sony A7RII
Telescope/Lens : Canon EF24mm f/1.4L II USM @ f/2.2
Filter : None
ISO : 800
Tracking Mount : Nano-Tracker
Autoguide : None
Total Exposure Time : 25min 50sec (25Sec x 62 frames)
w Dark Frames, Bias Frames
Process w : DeepSkyStacker & Photoshop CC
#AllMountainPhotographyOfHongKong
#CanonEF24mm
#DeepSkyStacker
#MilkyWay
#NanoTracker
#Sony #SonyA7RII #SonyFullFramer #SonyPhotos
#ThisIsHongKong
60 light - 800 iso - 180 sec.
8 dark - 800 iso - 180 sec.
31 offset - 800 iso - 1/8000 sec.
31 flat frame - 800 iso - 1/80 sec.
Reflex no modded on eq5 synscan without guide and telescope refractor TSED70Q 474mm 70mm F6.7.
Processed with DeepSkyStacker 3.3.2, Photoshop CS6
Taken with GSO 6" RC, CCDT67, Nikon D5100 in imaging train. PHD2 guided with Logitech Quickcam 4000/9x50 finderscope. DeepSkyStacker and StarTools used to stack/process.
19x 120s subs, 1600ISO
Darks, flats, and flat darks were used.
Shot using true dark current mod as developed by Nikonhacker.
I plan to add luminance subs using a DGM NPB filter, and re-combine in StarTools to see what can be gained.
8 x 4-minute exposures at ISO 1600, f/4. Pentacon 300mm lens & unmodified EOS 40D, piggybacked on a Celestron C8 telescope for manual guiding. Frames registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker.
Need a lot more sub-exposures, but clear nights are hard to come by! As it was, this night was much interrupted by cloud and rain showers, so I managed only just over 30 mins worth of frames.
51 x 60sec
RC6 with 0.6x flattener/reducer
Altair Astro Hypercam 183C PRO (Gain 1600, Offest 48, Bin 2x2)
SkyTech LPRO Max filter
Processed with Deep Sky Stacker and Affinity Photo
One of the 5 original unprocessed shots that went into the Sombrero Galaxy photo to give you an idea of my starting point when creating such a picture.
This is the in-camera JPEG. I worked on the RAW file to bring out more detail, and used DeepSkyStacker to 'sum' the best pixels - great software and the price is right!
Celestron CPC800 unguided and in alt-az mode. A mix of 5 and 15 sec exposures for a total of 2m45s using a stock Nikon D300s @ ISO 3200, focus eyeballed using the camera LCD screen. Registered and stacked with DeepSkyStacker.
Canon EOS1000D, ISO1600
EF-S18-55 @ 18mm f/5,6
16x30sec stacked with Deepskystacker
constellations:
left: Taurus (Stier)
right: Cetus (Walfisch)
I did get some deep sky imaging in before my holiday!
17 x 4-minutes at ISO 1600 & 6 x 5-minutes at ISO 1000, f/4.
All but 9 of the sub-exposures were obtained in previous imaging sessions.
Registered and stacked in DeepSkyStacker software.
Unmodified Canon EOS 40D & Pentacon 300mm f4, piggybacked on a Celestron C8 for manual guiding.
Shot through Celestron C8, Antares f/6.3 reducer, with Nikon D5100.
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker, processed in StarTools.
14.75min total (59x15s@3200iso), Chiswick 31/08/14
Altair 115ED/APO, AZ-EQ6, Canon 1100D (modified) CLS filter
BackyardEOS, Deepskystacker, Photoshop CS2
Imaging telescopes or lenses: Sky-Watcher Equinox 80ED
Imaging cameras: QHY8L
Mounts: Skywatcher AZ EQ6 GT
Guiding telescopes or lenses: Celestron 102mm f/6.6 Achromat
Guiding cameras: Magzero MZ-5m
Software: DeepSkyStacker, photoshop, Absoft Neat Image
Accessories: TecnoSky Flattener 1x
Resolution: 3042x2030
Dates: July 24, 2014
Frames: 20x180" -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 1.0 hours
Darks: ~15
Flats: ~21
Avg. Moon age: 26.86 days
Avg. Moon phase: 7.86%
Temperature: 25.00
RA center: 271.058 degrees
DEC center: -23.632 degrees
Orientation: 89.514 degrees
Field radius: 1.639 degrees
Locations: Drassa, Corinth, Greece
Image made from 3 shots taken around 2.30 am today using a Canon EOS 60D mounted on a Skywatcher 200 reflector. Images stacked/processed using DeepSkyStacker/Photoshop
Camera: Nikon D50
Exposure: 10 x 180s ISO 1600 RGB
Filter: Orion Skyglow Imaging Filter
Lens Aperature/Focal Length: 50×200mm
Telescope: Piggyback mounted on Meade LX200-GPS 10" ACF
Guided: Yes
Stacked: DeepSkyStacker
Adjustments: cropped/leveled in Photoshop
Location: Flintstone, GA
Imaging telescopes or lenses: Sky-Watcher Equinox 80ED
Imaging cameras: QHY8L
Mounts: Skywatcher AZ EQ6 GT
Guiding telescopes or lenses: Celestron 102mm f/6.6 Achromat
Guiding cameras: Magzero MZ-5m
Software: DeepSkyStacker, photoshop, Absoft Neat Image
Accessories: TecnoSky Flattener 1x
Resolution: 3028x2013
Dates: July 25, 2014
Locations: Drassa
Frames: 25x180" -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 1.2 hours
Darks: ~21
Flats: ~21
Bias: ~21
Avg. Moon age: 27.77 days
Avg. Moon phase: 3.46%
Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 3.00
RA center: 275.104 degrees
DEC center: -16.292 degrees
Pixel scale: 3.228 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: -90.490 degrees
Field radius: 1.630 degrees
The comet, still in Andromeda, is now a little brighter than when I imaged it on 29 Feb, and despite it being low in a murky sky, quite a long tail is visible to the camera. As mentioned with the previous photo, its sky location means I can't view or image it with my 'scope.
20 x 30-sec exposures at f/4 and ISO 3200 with an EOS 600D and Zeiss Jena 135mm f/3.5 lens, on a Vixen Polarie star tracker; frames stacked on the comet (hence the very slightly trailed stars) in DeepSkyStacker, with curves adjustment and further noise reduction in post-processing.
Cropped for higher resolutions
May 1, 2013
27 x 30 Sec
ISO 400
Telescope AT72ED @ 430MM focal length Canon T3i
Field Flattener
13 Darks & 15 flats & dark flats
Acquired with Backyard EOS
Processed with DeepSkyStacker & StarTools
About 1 hour total exposure. Taken with Canon 5d3, 300mm f/4, and AstroTrac. Stacked in DeepSkyStacker.
Greetings from Norfolk! Hope you don't mind me posting an occasional image here. This is the first time I have got my 4" celestron up and running. This is a stack of 5x30 sec frames combined with deepskystacker. All taken at ISO3200 using an Nikon D90 at prime focus. No bias or flat frames taken, so hot pixels show up. Adjusted in photoshop. I realise just what a difference a dark sky makes!
It's pretty noisy, but there it is. The yellow markers identify the supernova in the galaxy M82. Pretty pleased to get this with a DSLR and zoom telephoto lens. The spiral galaxy M81 is in the upper right. I just wondered if I could catch it the first night following it's announcement.
Nikon D90 camera
Sigma 150-500mm f/5-6.3 DG OS HSM APO Autofocus Lens
Sigma 2x EX DG APO Teleconverter
Orion TeleTrack GoTo Altazimuth Telescope Mount
31” exposure, f/12, ISO 2500
600mm (912mm 35-mm equivalent focal length);
Stack of 26 images DeepSkyStacker software
Post-processing with Photoshop CS5
My first attempt at processing/stacking with PixInsight (45 day trial). Cool program, much harder to learn than DeepSkyStacker. But it did a much better job at star alignment.
Manually off-axis guided for 6 x 10-minute exposures at ISO 1600, f6.3. Images registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker.
Celestron C8 telescope & unmodified Canon EOS 40D
Being the northernmost Messier objects, Bode's Galaxy (M81) and Cigar Galaxy (M82) can be observed yearlong in Boston and they allow longer exposure time without an equatorial mount. [394 frames x 6" exposure at 214 mm, F/5.0, ISO 1600]
CANON EOS 7D
Lens : Tamron 70-200 f/2.8
Focal length 175mm , ISO1600 , f/2.8 , 1.6sec
70% crop
light frame x 427
dark frame x 26
offset x 2
Sofrware : DeepSkyStacker
Galaxies M81 and M82
Distance: 12 million light years
Shot in February 2019.
FIRST GUIDED ASTROPHOTO!
Equipment/Software:
Explore Scientific ED 102 APO
Celestron Advanced VX Mount
Orion Starshoot Autoguider on Orion 50 mm guidescope
Nikon D3300 (unmodified)
80 images at 120 seconds at iso 800
DeepskyStacker - StartoolsFirst guided astrophoto.
Captured from my lawn at home using a William Optics 66mm APO telescope on a Celestron CI700 mount. The camera is a clear glass modified Canon Rebel XT with an Astronomic CLS clip in filter. This is an assembly of 28 four minute exposures @ 1600 iso and 28 corresponding dark frames. No guiding or PEC correction required. Frames stacked in Deepskystacker and adjusted in CS2.
Orion's Belt, Flame Nebula,
Horsehead Nebula and Great Nebula
© Flavius Ivașca
Nikon D3100 + Nikkor 70-300mm mounted on a motorised SkyWatcher EQ5 mount, no guiding.
F5, 180mm, ISO-800, 69 min total exposure.
Image stacked with DeepSkyStacker from 12 individual shots, 2 darks and 10 biased shots, resulting image enhanced in GIMP.
This is a different processing of the original picture (www.flickr.com/photos/28153034@N07/16098908475/) which does not aim to make the sky so dark thus making dim nebulae like the Horse-head Nebula more visible.
5/5/2013
AstroTech 72ED 430mm f6
40 x 30 seconds
15 darks
15 flats
15 flat darks
7 offsets
Captured with BackyardEOS
Processed with DeepSkyStacker, StarTools
---Photo details----
Stacks : 29 frames
Exposure Time : 29x182sec (~88 min total) @ ISO 200
Stack program : DeepSkyStacker
Stack mode : Entropy Weighted Average
Post processing : CS6 for : curves adjustments, contrast, saturation and unsharp mask filter
Crop: 5MP out of 24MP
---Photo scope---
Camera : Sony SLT-A77
Tube : Skywatcher Explorer 150P
Type : Newton
Focal length : 750 mm
Aperture : F/5
---Guide scope---
Camera : Starlight Xpress Lodestar
Tube : Skywatcher StarTravel-102
Type : Refractor
Focal length : 500 mm
Aperture : F/4.9
---Mount---
Mount : Skywatcher EQ-6
---Image details---
In this image we can see:
M5 / NGC 5904 : It is a very large globular cluster, having a 165 light years in diameter and containing at least 100 000 stars. It is about 24 500 light years from Earth.
---Other details---
M5 / NGC 5904 : globular cluster (App Mag:6.65 \ App Size: 23')
--
App = Apparent
Mag = Magnitude
On a personal note, I'm particularly proud of this photo since it's my first with my new mount (EQ-6), shot from my balcony through loads of light pollution and since my balcony faces south, with a poor polar alignment :)