Back from the Iowa Star Party, and my first field use of my Samyang lens. Mostly the results were good; shooting with the Samyang at f/2 appears to have great potential, but I need practice to make it really great.
The first night of the three-night party was on-and-off cloudy with enough breaks to keep visual observers happy, but it was not sufficient for the deep sky imaging I wanted to do. I collected some frames mainly to practice with the system.
The second night was almost perfect. Thunderstorms had moved through during the day and were gradually drifting off to the east as the night progressed. Frequent lightning flashes illuminated the eastern sky at for a while but diminished so that by the time I stopped (around 3 AM) they were not a factor. I used the first three hours of darkness to image the Heart Nebula / Soul Nebula / Double cluster area:
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| Heart and Soul Nebulae, Double Cluster |
Next up was an hour on the central Orion area (20 minutes per channel). I didn't do a good job with processing this.
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| Central Orion (M42, Horsehead, Flame) |
To illustrate what the lens can do, here's the Orion Nebula from the above image, post-processed for higher dynamic range:
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| M42 from above image |
It's pretty, but it's only 1293 x 1326 pixels, so at 300 DPI it's only good for a 4 x 6 inch print.
It was getting into the wee hours of the morning, but I couldn't stop--I get so few opportunities to image in Orion. I just had to image the Lambda nebula around Orion's head, something I had imaged eleven year earlier in H-alpha on an unusually warm February evening. This is based on a ridiculously short 30 minutes of total exposure (10 minutes per channel) and really illustrates the power of shooting at f/2:
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| Nebulosity at the head of Orion (Betelgeuse is at lower left) |
(All three of the above full images are at half-scale. For full scale images, see my
AstroBin gallery.)
Alas, the third night was not to be. The cold front came through and the day was windy and brisk. late in the afternoon it started raining; online sources suggested that clearing might happen around midnight -- or later. I decided to call it a star party and get some good sleep before the return drive the next morning.
After an imaging session it's always good to reflect on what was learned, and this trip had some lessons beyond learning that my sleeping bag advertised as being good to 20 F was definitely not.
Rotating the system proved very doable. It was awkward at first, but so is everything. I found it almost impossible take the focusing belt on and off without messing up the focus, but the penalty for that is minor. My NINA advanced sequence design with added pauses seemed to work out fine.
The first night I found that R-G-B-Dither cyclic acquisition was problematic. I was doing this to make drizzle processing possible. Mostly this worked, but occasionally PHD2 went wildly unstable in RA and suffered death-by-overcorrection. I'm not sure if this is a settling time issue or what. The second night I turned dither completely off and guiding was fine. The ASI 2600MM seems not to need dithering, but if I'm to drizzle, I'll need it.
Look again at the above images, and notice the slightly darker circular area at the center of each image: a donut hole. This arose because of bad flats; here is the stretched value of the ratio between older, correct flats and those from Iowa.
Lovely radial symmetry about the image center, but this
should be a nearly uniform field aside from any changes in dust.
I tried using the older flats in place of the new ones, but that failed. Because my system is currently almost dust free, I tried skipping the flats and using PixInsight to correct the vignetting. That also failed. My next attempt will be to use Photoshop to manually correct this issue.
My guess for what caused this is improper focus. I deferred shooting flats until I returned from Iowa, and in that time the zero reference point on the EAF was lost. This made it almost impossible to reproduce the focus used for the light frames, resulting in the poor flats. One clear night should make it possible to shoot some new flats at proper focus.
The weather forecast is mildly optimistic for the first week of November with highs in the 60s; will that warmth will bring the clear night I need?
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