Did You Guide Your Moon Shot?

  • Context: Stargazing 
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around astrophotography, specifically focusing on capturing images of celestial objects such as the Moon and the Orion Nebula. Participants share their experiences, techniques, and equipment used in their astrophotography endeavors.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant shares their first astrophotography attempt of the Moon, highlighting specific craters visible in the image.
  • Another participant inquires about the equipment and settings used for the Moon photograph.
  • A different participant describes their experience photographing the Orion Nebula, detailing the equipment and techniques used, including the use of film and digital methods for image processing.
  • Another participant mentions using a simple reflector telescope and the afocal projection technique for their Moon shot, providing specifics about their setup.
  • There is a discussion about the challenges of focusing when using digital cameras for astrophotography, particularly with manual focus and the limitations of camera settings.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants share various techniques and experiences without reaching a consensus on the best methods for astrophotography. There are differing opinions on the necessity of guiding shots and the effectiveness of different focusing techniques.

Contextual Notes

Some participants mention limitations related to camera settings, such as maximum exposure times and challenges with manual focus, which may affect the quality of astrophotography results.

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Well since I suggested the thread…
Here’s a crop from my very first astro-pic. It’s not super sharp or of great magnification, but I was pretty happy with my first attempt.

This is a photo of the Moon, southern portion. It shows Crater Calvius near the centre, and Crater Tycho near the top.

Enjoy.
 

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Thanks check. What equipment/settings did you use?
 
Here is a picture of the Orion Nebula (always a favorite) that I took through my 6" Astro-Physics refractor about 15 years ago. I used an OM-1 camera body at prime focus (mirror locked up) loaded with Konica ASA 3200 (grainy, but fast) and a 20-minute exposure.

To digitize the picture, I imaged the 5x7 print with a digital camera. Then I applied unsharp masking in Photoshop to bring our the detail in the nebula. If I ever move back out to the country (dark skies) I will build a roll-off roof observatory and buy a CCD camera for my scope. Those cameras are expensive, but the costs of film, development, and printing for conventional photography mount up really fast!

Due to the size constraints (50K) imposed by the BBS, I had to crop the images and reduce their resolutions substantially, but you get the idea...
 
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I used a very simple set-up. An Orbiter 3200 reflector telescope, 76mm mirror 700mm focal length, 20mm eyepiece.

The photograph was taken using the afocal projection technique (camera placed in front of eyepiece). The camera was attached to the telescope with a special clamp. I used a digital camera, 4.0 megapixles, normal settings, fast shutter.



Turbo-1, that's a pretty cool photo. :cool:
 
check said:
Turbo-1, that's a pretty cool photo. :cool:
I'm glad you like it. I've never tried using my digital camera with a telescope - it was hard enough to learn to get acceptable results with film! I will have to make an adapter and try your afocal technique sometime.

Did you guide your moon shot?
 
turbo-1 said:
Did you guide your moon shot?

Nope. Since it was a regular shutter speed exposure and because the moon is so bright there was no need to guide it.

Be aware though, if you're using the afocal technique with manual focus on your digicam, it's somewhat difficult to get good focus if you're looking at the LCD display. So unless your camera has live video-out where you can connect it to a TV (so you can get a clearer picture of what you’re trying to take a picture of) and adjust your focus that way, or unless your camera's viewfinder displays what’s going through the aperture, it might be tricky to manually focus...and sometimes the auto focus is unreliable.

Edit:

One more thing about digital cameras and astrophotography... Typically digicams either automatically set the shutter speed according to lighting conditions or give you a very limited amount of options. My camera only allows a maximum exposure time of 2 seconds.
 
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