@@Lichtblick1 I am very new to Solar video processing but for me it's a very long winded process using several software packages. I capture the series of videos using Firecapture, I process each video to a single stacked image of the best 150 frames of 1000 from each video using AstroStakkert. I then used ImPPG to sharpen, deconvolve and invert each frame and then batch align each frame in ImPPG. Each frame is then processed in Pixinsight to colourise, crop and resize if required. I then take all the frames into PIPP to combine into a video.
@@astroskyman Please tell what the raw image looks like directly through a telescope - black and white, without a brightened circle, without “flashes” on the circle? 2. What exactly did you distort or change in the raw picture? Thank you.
@@Lichtblick1 Hi, I don't really understand your question, all I can say is I expose the histogram in the capture program (Firecapture) to about 85%, I do not expose separately for the disc or filaments as all the data is contained in the image, it just needs to be processed to bring out the data. Different telescope systems have different requirements so it's not possible to answer directly.
Stunning video!
Hello Brendan, please tell how you processed the video with graphics and with what program.
@@Lichtblick1 I am very new to Solar video processing but for me it's a very long winded process using several software packages. I capture the series of videos using Firecapture, I process each video to a single stacked image of the best 150 frames of 1000 from each video using AstroStakkert. I then used ImPPG to sharpen, deconvolve and invert each frame and then batch align each frame in ImPPG. Each frame is then processed in Pixinsight to colourise, crop and resize if required. I then take all the frames into PIPP to combine into a video.
@@astroskyman Please tell what the raw image looks like directly through a telescope - black and white, without a brightened circle, without “flashes” on the circle?
2. What exactly did you distort or change in the raw picture?
Thank you.
@@astroskyman ? Hello?
@@Lichtblick1 Hi, I don't really understand your question, all I can say is I expose the histogram in the capture program (Firecapture) to about 85%, I do not expose separately for the disc or filaments as all the data is contained in the image, it just needs to be processed to bring out the data. Different telescope systems have different requirements so it's not possible to answer directly.