App/program that allows you to adjust spectrums of light?

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A user seeks a program or website that allows adjustment of light spectra in astronomical images, expressing interest in how telescopes capture this data. It is clarified that telescopes typically record greyscale images through various filters rather than color images, and the SDSS website offers extensive spectral data on celestial objects. Users can access different images taken through multiple filters, known as ugriz, from the SDSS site. While the spectral data provides intensity versus wavelength plots, it lacks spatial information for creating images at different wavelengths. The conversation highlights the complexity of astronomical imaging and the resources available for further exploration.
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Hey!

I'm looking for a web-site or something with images from galaxy's and nebulae that allows you to adjust which spectra of light the image portrays.
I know that the images shown of galaxys usually are "translated" into our visible spectrum of light, but I'd like to be able to adjust which spectra I see myself. Is that possible?

is it true that when telescopes make these images, that they actually record all the spectra? or is the data not even available? (i.e. do they choose which spectra to record before the image is taken?)

This would be really awesome, if such a website/program exists!
 
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I don't know of an app that does what you want but I found this site where people can process the raw image data from Hubble to produce a stunning picture. You might further references there.

http://hubblesite.org/get_involved/hubble_image_processors/
 
jedishrfu said:
I don't know of an app that does what you want but I found this site where people can process the raw image data from Hubble to produce a stunning picture. You might further references there.

http://hubblesite.org/get_involved/hubble_image_processors/

Thanks! I see now that the telescopes don't actually take color images, but greyscale images at different filters. I didn't know that!
 
There's a wealth of spectral data on stars, galaxies and quasars available at the SDSS website at http://mirror.sdss3.org/ I attached an image of the type of spectrum you can get. It will take a little bit of learning to learn how to find the spectra (they are under "Optical Spectra"), but it is well worth it. At SDSS, they run a preliminary imaging run, then select which objects they want spectra on, and then take the spectra. SDSS is able to get spectra on about 500-1000 objects at a time for each exposure.
 

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phyzguy said:
There's a wealth of spectral data on stars, galaxies and quasars available at the SDSS website at http://mirror.sdss3.org/ I attached an image of the type of spectrum you can get. It will take a little bit of learning to learn how to find the spectra (they are under "Optical Spectra"), but it is well worth it. At SDSS, they run a preliminary imaging run, then select which objects they want spectra on, and then take the spectra. SDSS is able to get spectra on about 500-1000 objects at a time for each exposure.

Thats cool! but this data contains only the total light of the entire object, right? So you can't see an image made of different wavelengths
 
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It is common practice to use filters to block undesired frequencies. With modern computers photons can be deselected based on frequency, which is often more efficient.
 
questioner1 said:
Thats cool! but this data contains only the total light of the entire object, right? So you can't see an image made of different wavelengths

A spectrum is a plot where the light is broken up into different wavelengths. The plot I uploaded shows the light intensity on the Y-axis vs wavelength on the X-axis.
 
To be overly explicit, a spectrum is exactly an image of the different wavelenghts from some source. It does however not make a picture in the sense that you have any spatial information.
 
Tobychev said:
To be overly explicit, a spectrum is exactly an image of the different wavelenghts from some source. It does however not make a picture in the sense that you have any spatial information.

Right. If you want images at different wavelengths, the SDSS site has 5 different images taken through 5 different filters, called ugriz. You can download the fits files for these images.
 
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