This is astrophotography, so things are never as easy as one hopes.
At the beginning of September I had an all-night imaging session at the club's Eagle Lake Observatory site. I was trying to do a few targets: M31, The California Nebula, and because a little time was left over as the dawn was approaching M42. Let's start with the latter because it illustrates the main issue.
I had only about a half an hour before the morning sky started to really brighten, so I set up NINA to do five 90-second frames for each LRGB channel. Here is the initial stretched result:
I did say LRGB, but this is mono! It turned out I took 20 L frames; the mystery is how that happened. I wish I could tell you, but I don't know the actual cause. My best guess is that NINA lost contact with the filter wheel and couldn't execute the filter changes. So this is not quite the image I wanted, but eventually I'll be able to shoot the chroma and make a nice image.
The same thing happened with my California Nebula frames and I've got 96 L frames which should make for a really nice eventual image. Here's a quick processing of the luminance frames:
This seems to have started as soon as I began imaging M31, as those are all (so far as I can tell) luminance frames. All 125 of them! I can say this from the early look at the M31 stack that if you want a very smooth background, shoot 125 frames! This is a first look at the luminance image, where I've somewhat de-emphasized field stars using PixInsight's Morphological Transformation:
Incidentally, these are all imaged using the Takahashi CR 0.73X focal reducer on my FSQ-106, so I was operating at f/3.65 and an effective focal length of about 387mm.
Another mystery was easier to solve. I noticed that autofocusing was having a very difficult time. This was traced to a loosening of the connection between the motor and focuser shaft. I've tightened that up now, and just in case that was happening because of overly tight parking of the focuser I'm going to change the focuser's home position.
This weekend I hope to actually collect the M31 chrominance, and maybe deeper into September get the California Nebula color data.
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I'm returning to something I started back in 2020: spectrographic imaging. More about that next time (I hope!)
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