Capturing Ancient Light Astrophotography Basic tools and techniques (and a little theory) repared for the OAS by Al Tuttle
Jan 14, 2016
Capturing Ancient Light
Astrophotography
Basic tools and techniques
(and a little theory)Prepared for the OAS
byAl Tuttle
Disclaimer
This presentation is an amateur work, prepared for demonstrating some of the principles of astrophotography to our local astronomy club members. As such, do not rely on any information contained herein as fact solely based on this document.
This presentation is for informal training purposes only. No monetary compensation may be associated with obtaining, transmitting, or using this presentation in any way whatsoever.
I’m an Amateur, NOT an expert
I’ve been doing this for a year…. Getting up to speed has been like drinking from a fire hose.
Let me say: Many topics addressed here are deep and technical and I’ve
read long, contentious dialogs debating the pros and cons of how to best accomplish some of the tasks.
I’m sure many things here are over simplified, or just plain wrong.
However you don’t need to know it all to take satisfying images.
Give it a try. Start small, work with what you have, and learn as you go.
Why do it?After all there’s Hubble
It’s fun! Lots of new things to learn. You can “see” things you just can’t otherwise. The pleasure of being able to say “I did that”. Can be done under light polluted skies.
Besides…… Gives you something to do when you can’t sleep.
(Actually, you can often sleep while you do it)
Helps rid yourself of any of disposable income.
Wide field images (Milky Way, Constellations, Star trails, etc) Typical equipment is a 35mm film or DSLR camera & lens
mounted on a stationary tripod, or equatorial mount.
Lunar & Planetary Pictures For Lunar images, almost any camera will do. Film or DSLR
camera for lunar images and webcams are the most common. For the planets a CCD webcam coupled to a long focal length
telescope can do an excellent job.
Deep Space Objects (DSOs) CCD or CMOS camera capable of long exposure, a decent
telescope on an equatorial mount.
The basic types
Astrophotography: Overview
The basic types (cont)
Images may be taken Afocal or at Prime Focus
TypicalAfocal Setup
Also calledEyepiece Projection
Astrophotography: Overview
Typical Prime Focus Setups
The basic types (cont) Images may be taken with a One Shot Color Camera
Typical OSC Cameras&
Connection to Scope (Note no filter wheel)
Astrophotography: Overview
The basic types (cont) Or with a Monochrome camera and color filters
Typical Mono Camera and Filter Setup
SBIG Integrated Wheel
Astrophotography: Overview
Lunar and Planetary Imaging
Almost any telescope, but a long focal length is helpful for planetary work. Barlows, Powermates also used.
DSLR cameras often used for Lunar images Remarkable images of planets can now be taken with an
inexpensive webcam. Short video clips are taken at 10 to 30 frames/sec to collect
hundreds or thousands of images. The images are sorted for quality, registered, and stacked to
create a much higher quality image than a single frame. Free software is available to stack and process images
(Registax, Kieth’s Image stacker, and others.)
Lunar & Planetary Imagining
Due to seeing conditions, it’s very difficult to capture a high quality, single frame image.
At left is typical movie clip.
Selecting, registering, and stacking yields photos like this. (actually much better than this)
Lunar & Planetary Imagining
Lunar & Planetary Imagining
Lunar/Planetary imaging is fast and fun Due to the short exposure times, precise tracking and
expensive mounts are not necessary. Many video clips can be acquired in just a couple hours
including setup. Processing is fairly rapid, typically just a few hours work to sort
and stack the best frames.
BUT! Quality of the image is very dependant on seeing conditions. Focusing can be very challenging Webcam sensors are very small. Getting the image on the
chip can be difficult.
The Ups and Downs
Deep Sky Photography
Dim targets mean longer exposures. DSO imaging is usually done with dedicated CCD imagers or
DSLR cameras. Frame exposure times of 1 to 30 minutes are typical. Total
times can be many hours. Long exposures can place severe demands on the telescope
mount to avoid tracking errors. An equatorial mount is best. It can be done with an Alt-Azm
mount, but field rotation will be an issue. Processing is substantially more involved.
However, great images can still be captured and processed with relatively inexpensive gear.
Deep Sky Photography
Basic Elements: (some things you’ll want to understand) How your mount works and how well it tracks.
Your telescope and camera specs (pixel and sensor size, sensitivity, focal length, etc)
Image capture techniques and pertinent issues. (Focus tools, Sky background/exposure times, etc.)
Techniques to improve the quality of the raw data.
How to assemble the image.
Deep Sky Photography
Tracking: Know your mount
Knowing how your mount performs is essential. Is it strong and on a stable tripod? Rule of thumb is for photography, the weight on the
mount should be half the “rated” capacity. Very close polar alignment is important. The closer it is,
the fewer corrections will have to be made. Balance of the scopes and weights is also very important. All motorized mounts have Periodic and Non-Periodic
Errors. Knowing how much of each, and how to mitigate the errors is
important. Some mounts have PE correction (PEC) built in.
Deep Sky Photography: The Mount
The Equatorial Mount
The Go-To pointing system uses both RA & DEC.
When Tracking, the mount rotates on the RA Axis.
When Guiding, corrections are made to both RA & DEC.
Deep Sky Photography: The Mount
Polar Alignment: The better the RA axes is aligned with the NCP, the better the mount will track, and fewer corrections will have to be made.
Deep Sky Photography: Polar Alignment
Tracking: Balance the Load
Balance is very important to: Keep the load on the gears to a low, safe level. Minimize the effects of backlash (play) in the gears. Minimize the non-periodic errors due to rotational friction. The Balance is adjusted by moving the counterweights
and/or OTA so that the RA axis is just a touch East heavy. Balance in DEC is less important, but most set it a little tail heavy.
Deep Sky Photography: The Mount
Tracking: Guiding
You can manually guide. Not many folks do any more. Auto-Guiding fixes a lot of problems.
Many would say it is required for long exposure imaging. Corrections are made at the sub arc-second level. Can easily correct for substantial PE and some Non-PE. Some dedicated imagers like the SBIG ST and STL series of
cameras can be ordered with an integrated 2nd “guide camera”, so no second scope or camera is needed.
The equipment used for auto-guiding does not have to be expensive. Inexpensive scopes and cameras can be used. There is very capable free software available (PHD, Guide Dog,
and others).
Deep Sky Photography: The Mount
Guiding setups
Deep Sky Photography: Guiding
Piggyback and Side-by-side setups are common…. But watch out for flexure in either case.
Cameras…
Dedicated CCD cameras and DSLRs are the most commonly used for DSO imaging. Sometimes modified DSLRs are used that have the I/R
filter removed or replaced to enhance long wavelength response.
Cost goes from around $150 to many thousands. Filters are also needed for “monochrome” CCD
cameras…. But then…
Deep Sky Photography: Imagers
Actually….
All CCD/CMOS cameras are Monochrome. To get natural color, the light is filtered through Red,
Green, and Blue filters. The collected data is then added together to form the RGB
composite (i.e. color) image.
“Color” cameras have the RGB filters dyed onto the CCD or CMOS sensor in a certain pattern.
A little better resolution is obtained with a monochrome camera, with separate filters.
Deep Sky Photography: Imagers
Cameras… The Sensor
For OSC sensors, a picture might help This represents a typical
color CCD/CMOS sensor. Note the pixels arranged in
a grid. The “filters” are dyed on
the CCD in what’s called a Bayer Array.
Monochrome cameras don’t have the dye. Separate filters are used in front of the camera.
Deep Sky Photography: Imagers
Sensor in an OSC camera
Cameras… Sensor Specs It can be confusing; Megapixels, Quantum Efficiency,
ADUs, ABG, NABG, ….. . Think of the sensor as a bunch of tiny buckets in a grid.
The number of buckets is the number of pixels…. Megapixels. As a photon lands in a bucket, it adds to the charge the bucket
contains. How easily it adds to the charge => QE. When a bucket is full it’s called Saturated.
If full, a bucket may overflow into adjacent buckets. It’s called Blooming.
Some cameras control (gate) how that happens… they are called anti-blooming or ABG. If it doesn’t control it’s a NABG.
The charge for each pixel is converted to a pixel value (ADU) when an exposure is read out.
Deep Sky Photography: Imagers
Sensors really should be matched to the telescope & target: Field of view (FOV): Determined by the size of the
sensor and the FL of the scope. The native image size is determined by the sensor size. Focal reducers can give some flexibility at the cost of resolution
(and watch for color shift and vignette). Large sensors are becoming available at reasonable cost.
Pixel size “should” be matched to the focal length. A large pixel size sensor (e.g., 20 uM) on a short FL scope would
be undersampling, giving chunky/square stars. Values like .75 to 2.5 arc-secs/pixel is typically recommended
depending on seeing conditions.
(Check out The CCD Calculator, from the New Astronomy Press)
Cameras… Sensor Size Issues
Deep Sky Photography: Imagers
CCD & CMOS sensors contribute noise to the image. The noise is the result of defects (like hot pixels) and the
electrical currents always present in the sensor (called dark current and bias noise).
The amount of noise is sensitive to temperature. The colder the chip is, the lower the noise. Rule of thumb, every 5 deg C, the noise is cut in half (down to about -15C.)
The more expensive dedicated imagers have a device (TEC) to cool the chip, and may have electronics to closely regulate the temperature.
Regulated temperature makes correcting for the noise much easier (makes subtraction of Dark Frames more accurate & consistent).
Some cooled cameras don’t regulate, but get the sensor so cold that Dark frames can be neglected.
Cameras… Sensor Noise
Deep Sky Photography: Imagers
Image Capture & Processing….
First a couple notes on image file formats: Most common file type used is the FITS format for CCD
imagers, and RAW for DSLR cameras. These are lossless formats, preserving all the data captured.
FITS: Flexible Image Transport System. FITS is designed specifically for scientific data and hence includes provisions including human readable data along with image information.
Raw: So named as these files contains minimally processed data from the image sensor of a digital camera.
Other formats can also be used (TIFF, JPG, BMP) depending on what camera/software used. Note it’s best to use a 16-bit or better format to preserve as much data as possible.
Deep Sky Photography: Processing
Make an Image… The basics
Regardless of “color” or “monochrome” the process is fundamentally the same: Collect images of each color desired (Typ: Lum, Red, Green, Blue). Calibrate and stack the images for each channel. Register/align the images. Combine them into an RGB/LRGB composite (color) picture.
Deep Sky Photography: Process
Basic RGB Process….
Monochrome cameras Take, calibrate, and stack the R, G, B (L optional) images into
“master” R, G, B, & (L) frames. Most folks stretch, and clean up the final masters prior to color
combining, but it can be done after. Register (align) the master frames. Color combine them by adding the masters together (there are
several programs that will do this task for you). Adjust the color levels and saturation. Do final processing in your favorite photo editing software.
Photoshop CS seems to be the favorite, but many folks use PS Elements, Paint Shop X2, or the Gimp (however these are 8-bit so only 256 shades of gray vice 65000).
Deep Sky Photography: Processing
Process in Favorite Editor
TakeImages
Combine masters for color image
Deep Sky Photography: Process Overview
Calibrate,Stack
Images
(For OSC cameras, just one set of images is taken and processed.)
Basic RGB Processing….
OSC cameras The data from the Bayer matrix of an OSC camera must be “de-
bayered” to create the RGB(L) channels, then recombined into a color image.
Programs like Deep Sky Stacker will automate the process of calibrating, aligning, stacking, de-bayering, and creating the color image. OR
You can do it yourself. After calibrating each frame: Use a program to de-bayer and extract the L, R, G, & B images as
individual files. Process (stretch, smooth, et. a.l.), Align and Stack each of the channels. Then RGB(L) combine, just as would be done for a monochrome camera. This is a little more work, but gives added control and the ability to stretch
and clean up the L, R,G, & B masters prior to color combining. This typically results in a bit smoother image.
Deep Sky Photography: Processing
Signal vs Noise (S/N Ratio)
This concept is probably the single most important aspect of taking and processing your images.
Simply defined: Signal is the image info you meant to get, noise is the other stuff: Such as dust on the optics, dark current, and hot pixels on the
CCD. Some noise is random (dark current, stray light), some is not (hot pixels).
Several factors affect the total noise in the final image. Some noise is under your direct control when imaging
(exposure time, filters, optics, …. ) Some noise is inherent in the equipment, and mitigating
techniques are used during processing (e.g., Stacking).
Deep Sky Photography: Down with Noise
Signal vs Noise: Taking Images There are things that can be done to minimize noise as
you take pictures: Shoot under the darkest skies possible. If in a light polluted area, use I/R and/or Light Pollution filters. Exposure length (often called integration time), affects the
signal to noise ratio. There are some pretty fancy formulas to figure out the optimum times, but in general:
Under dark skies: Shoot the longest exposures you can (but try to get at least 5 subs).
Under not so dark skies: Shorten the exposure time, and shoot many, many more subs.
With DSLR cameras, the ISO selected makes a difference.
Deep Sky Photography: Down with Noise
Signal vs Noise: Image Calibration First… some terminology:
Light Frame: The individual pictures you take of your target. Dark Frame: An image taken with no light hitting the sensor. Flat Frame: A half saturated white light picture used to correct
for optical path problems Flat Dark: Same as a Dark frame but at the exposure time of
the Flat (it is applied to the Flat). Bias Frame: A minimum time exposure dark frame taken to
account for CCD internal baseline charge. (can be safely ignored unless doing advanced imaging & cal).
ADU or PV: Anolog Digital Units or Pixel Values. The “count” of how many photons hit a given pixel.
Deep Sky Photography: Image Calibration
Image Calibration: Images (Light frames) are “calibrated” to remove noise
from the Sensor and Optics chain. Dark Frames
Taken with the scope/camera covered and the sensor at the same temp as the Light frames to be taken.
The Dark frames exposure length should be the same as the Light frames. Several frames (5 to 8) should be taken and stacked/averaged to make a “master dark”.
The Master Dark frame is subtracted from the Light Frames. This removes the noise added by hot pixels, dark current, and
bias noise in the CCD itself.
Deep Sky Photography: Image Calibration - Darks
Flat frames Used to correct for imperfections (dust, vignette, etc) in the
optical train. Taken at focus, under a uniform, white, dim source, at an
exposure time long enough to about half saturate the CCD pixels.
Note this is process is very fast. Typical exposure lengths are 0.3 to 2 seconds each.
Like the darks, many frames should be taken, stacked and averaged. After the Flat is stacked. It is normalized (each pixel value
divided by the average PV of the frame). The Flat is applied by dividing it into the Light frames.
Flat Darks Flat Darks are taken at the same exposure time as the Flat
frames. Used just like regular dark frames against the individual Flat
frames to corrects the Flat frames for CCD noise.
Deep Sky Photography: Image Calibration - Flats
Deep Sky Photography: Raw Light
Deep Sky Photography: Dark Subtracted
Deep Sky Photography: Flat Applied
Image Stacking After calibrating, images are stacked (averaged)in order to
reduce other sources of random noise… increasing the S/N ratio. Stacking lots of frames will significantly improve the image.
However it’s not a linear relationship: Stacking 4 frames will cut the noise in half. Stacking 16 frames will cut it in half again.
The frames are aligned by picking a number of stars, and using those to index the placement of each image.
Stack: Various methods of averaging the data Average, Median, K-sigma… Used for various situations like
number of images, amount of noise, and others. For example Median stacking will remove satellite trails,
Averaging won’t.
Deep Sky Photography: Image Stacking
Deep Sky Photography: Histogram Stretch
Deep Sky Photography: Register for RGB Combine
Deep Sky Photography: Histogram
Deep Sky Photography: Time to Process
Deep Sky Photography: Other Tools
Resources
Websites
www.cloudynights.com (visit the forums here… great people willing to help)
www.starizona.com (good site for equipment and info)
www.newastro.com (good resource for book, info, software)
groups.yahoo.com (great set of forums)
www.astromart.com (good deals can be found)
www.sbig.com (good products, and good info)
www.starklabs.com (solid, practical, inexpensive software)
Books
Handbook of Astronomical Image Processing, William Bell & James Burnell
The New CCD Astronomy (Ron Wodaski, The New Astronomy Press)
Deep Sky Photography: Other Tools
Resources - Software
Capture & Processing
AIP4Win (Comes with Book)
PixInsight (LE version is free, but dated)
CCDSoft (Software Bisque)
CCDOps (SBIG Software)
Envisage (Meade Autostar Suite)
Nebulosity (Low Price)
Deep Sky Stacker (Free)
Maxim DL
AstroArt
Registax (Free)
Guidedog (Free)
PHD Guiding (Free)
Photo Processing
PhotoShop CS3, CS2, Elements
Paint Shop Pro X2
The Gimp (Open Source)
Planetarium and Tools
Stellarium
The Sky
Voyager4
CCD Calculator (The New Astronomy Press)
AstroPlanner
WCS - Drift Alignment Software
My Gear
Deep Sky Photography: Equipment
1st Night Out M31 - Mono DSI Pro
Your first try is bound to be better than mine.
2nd Attempt - M13 - Mono DSI Pro
I felt real good about this one…. considering
Another Early Attempt M81 - Mono DSI Pro
Starting to feel this is actually possible
Orion Nebula M42 - Mono w/fltrs DSI Pro
Lunar Eclipse, Webcam on 80mm scope
Silverdale Jr High, Feb 2008
Cocoon Nebula IC5146 (DSI2 Pro w/fltrs)
(Taken at the Hurricane Ridge Star party this year.)
M33 Pinwheel Galaxy (OSC ST-2Kxcm)
NGC 2237 Rosette Nebula
Eastern Veil (OSC ST-2Kxcm)
Whew!! FinallyGot Questions?
Prepared forThe Olympic Astronomical Society
by
Al Tuttlewww.alberts-astro.com