Thanks for showing your process. I had to look up "Eye of God Nebula" because I've never hear of that before and thought it looked like the Helix Nebula. One in the same. I guess I'm old school having been introduced to deep sky objects 30 years ago.
Thanks for getting back to me. I really enjoy your content and feel you will help me in my quest to get better at astrophotography. I have been using 50 minute sessions before and after transit to keep field rotation to a minimum. Thanks again!
I've noticed that when I started taking thousands of subs over days, or even weeks, on the same object that field rotation almost disappears. i think it's because when the object is imaged in many different orientations the field rotation gets layered over when the the object in the frame is matched up. This is an interesting hobby.
Thanks for the video. I picked up a Seestar S50 for my wifes birthday not long ago. First night out she had already taken M31, M33, M42, M45 and was smiling saying she was matching my images from my rigs, lol. I was not expecting much but was blown away by the images from this tiny beast. Looking forward to processing her raw data on Siril and appreciate you walk through tutorial.
Thanks for the channel, I have had a seestar about as long as you but am not nearly advanced. I was wondering why you don't use siril to convert the tif back to a fit? Thanks again for the logical explanations! - Jim G.
I have not been a big fan of Mosaic as I like to stack 3 to 12 thousand images on an object. It depends on the object. The Orion Nebula is bright and I've gotten great results with just 2600 FITS. The Cat's Eye Nebula is one of the most difficult objects for the Seestar. It is small and Dim. I have 10,000 FITS on it so far and am only now making progress in bringing out some detail and color.
Thanks for showing your process. I had to look up "Eye of God Nebula" because I've never hear of that before and thought it looked like the Helix Nebula. One in the same. I guess I'm old school having been introduced to deep sky objects 30 years ago.
Thanks for the info! Your willingness to share knowledge in such an unselfish way is commendable. I will watch and like your videos.
Thanks for getting back to me. I really enjoy your content and feel you will help me in my quest to get better at astrophotography. I have been using 50 minute sessions before and after transit to keep field rotation to a minimum. Thanks again!
I've noticed that when I started taking thousands of subs over days, or even weeks, on the same object that field rotation almost disappears. i think it's because when the object is imaged in many different orientations the field rotation gets layered over when the the object in the frame is matched up. This is an interesting hobby.
Thanks for the video. I picked up a Seestar S50 for my wifes birthday not long ago. First night out she had already taken M31, M33, M42, M45 and was smiling saying she was matching my images from my rigs, lol. I was not expecting much but was blown away by the images from this tiny beast. Looking forward to processing her raw data on Siril and appreciate you walk through tutorial.
@@Jefferson196 Thanks. This little scope definitely punches above it's weight. Clear skies to both of you.
The algorithm must be reading my mind. I'm ordering the S 50 when I get on today.
You will not regret it. Welcome to the Rabbit Hole. :)
@PhotonRookie-vk7ge I like rabbit holes.
Thank
Thanks for the channel, I have had a seestar about as long as you but am not nearly advanced. I was wondering why you don't use siril to convert the tif back to a fit? Thanks again for the logical explanations! - Jim G.
@@JimGriskewicz You're welcome Jim. I should be using Siril to change file and will be doing so.
Nice guide/vid, please keep them coming. Also is there a reason you use gimp to save as a fit as you can do this in Siril?
Thanks for watching. I have lots more in the works. also, thanks for tip about saving as a FIT in Siril.
That something I wasn't expecting. Found that in the mosiac mode. How long do you image each session.
I have not been a big fan of Mosaic as I like to stack 3 to 12 thousand images on an object. It depends on the object. The Orion Nebula is bright and I've gotten great results with just 2600 FITS. The Cat's Eye Nebula is one of the most difficult objects for the Seestar. It is small and Dim. I have 10,000 FITS on it so far and am only now making progress in bringing out some detail and color.