Here is Comet Johnson again from a relatively dark site. I did not devote much time to it since it was not my primary target this night. It is only a little over an hour of integration. Perhaps it was a little too warm to use 5 minutes/ISO 1600 for exposures, at least with this low number of sub-images. But, I didn’t want to have to shoot two sets of darks, so I stuck with one exposure length all night long.
Images
M51 Spiral Galaxy – Only 5 Sub-Images
I was testing the rig on this as the first thing after getting all my gear setup. It was only 5 sub-images. I stopped when Comet Johnson got high enough to shoot.
The full size, full res original is fun to poke through since there are many faint fuzzies in this area, which makes it interesting. I also have a cropped version below:
C/2015 ER61 (PANSTARRS) on April 8, 2017, 09:45 UT
The month of April 2017 is turning out to be really good for comets. So far, 4 photogenic comets are all vying for my attention. On the morning of April 8th, 2017, I got a chance to capture images of Comet PANSTARRS (C/2015 ER61) for the first time. It was a short imaging session due to moonlight interference and the comet rising only high enough to image shortly before sunrise.
Too bad it was short, since I also wanted images of Comet Lovejoy. It was just north of Comet PANSTARRS and I visually spotted it in 15×70’s binoculars. But, by the time the sky and comets got right and the exposures looked good, it was already 5:17 AM. Astronomical twilight was starting at about 5:30 AM. So, most of my shots ended up having either moonlight interference or twilight interference. Doh! 🙂
I could only get so much out of the two stacks I ended up with. At least it was something. I also tried out some new stuff and that was a plus. An update to my planetarium pointing software allowed me to tell PHD2 Guiding to move the mount with the comet instead of the stars. It worked somewhat. At some points the tracking was only so-so and I had to throw out a couple of subs But, I needed to try it to find that out.
Comet Johnson Quickie in Strong Moonlight
While waiting for another comet to rise high enough to start shooting, I took a few shots of Comet Johnson even though the moonlight was strong in that area and I wasn’t expecting to get much. Surprisingly, the comet shows up with a slightly diminished tail, but the head and coma show well enough.
I did not spend much time on it and was not going to bother processing the data at first. The colors and dim areas suffered, but not enough so that it couldn’t be fixed somewhat. Lucky for me. 🙂
New Comet C/2017 E4 (Lovejoy)
Terry Lovejoy’s newest comet is in outburst and has brightened quite a bit above what was expected of it. Now, it is a really nice comet in the dawn skies. Unfortunately, it is moving fast and quickly heading lower and lower to the horizon with each morning. So, the good viewing window is short and sweet.
I had to wait for it to clear a roof and it was already after 10:30 UT (5:30 am CDT,) so I had to shoot it between the start of astronomical twilight and nautical twilight. Plus, this is from a Bortle red/white zone, so I had lots of LP to contend with. Not the best conditions, but hey, at least I got a usable image.
Comet 41P on April 4, 2017
Taken from a Bortle Red/White zone, this image is 40 sub-images of 120 seconds each at ISO 800. This is double than what I was able to do before. The inclusion of an IDAS-LPS drop-in filter for my Canon T3 allowed this one stop of extra exposure. So, now I know how much the drop-in filter blocks, which is quite a bit.
Regardless of the above, the gradients and the color shift from removing that much LP still make processing difficult and tedious. I am glad I can drive just 30 minutes and get to a spot dark enough to be camera noise limited instead of skyfog limited. It is such a joy to process images that have low LP levels. 🙂
M27, The Dumbbell Nebula, Apr 4, 2017
Here’s one I haven’t shot in a while. I was using it as a test to see how bad the LP would be. Not long after this was taken, Comet Lovejoy was in the same general area LP-wise, so I had a pretty good idea how much comet I might get.
The Moon on April 4, 2017
Comet Johnson on April 1, 2017
Here’s a quickie of Comet Johnson. I took two test images before the automated run, which I ended up using. But, I was pretty tired by the time I got to this one, so I let it shoot automated while I took a nap. Unfortunately, the guiding got screwed up after only 11 sub-images and I didn’t shoot more of it after I woke up since it was near sunrise and I needed to shoot calibration data for my other stuff instead. Oh, well…
Comet 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak – Closest to Earth Day
On Friday evening, March 31st (April 1st in Universal Time) I drove out to a dark sky site and got as many images of Comet 41P as I could. 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak was closest to Earth on this day and I was hoping I could document the encounter.
I ended up with 80 good sub-images out of about 100. Unfortunately, I had guiding problems, equipment issues and mount troubles. A bad connection on my new battery pack kept me from starting until I re-rigged it and during the night the mount kept making knocking noises and jerking in RA, making lines instead of star points every 5 to 10 sub-images. I’ll have to figure that one out, since it never did that before.
At least it was very dark and transparent. I was camera noise limited and not LP limited for my exposures. It was kind of weird to shoot 7 minute subs and see that I still had a ways to go before mid-histogram. I wish it was like that every time. lol