Sunday, May 29, 2016
Issue #495, Here’s Exactly How You Do It: Imaging Jupiter (or Mars or Saturn)…
Jupiter under poor seeing with the setup described herein... |
I’ve posted articles concerning planetary imaging more than
once in the past, but in them I’ve always given you alternatives, “You can buy software A or software B. You use
telescope A or telescope B, you can try camera A or camera B.” But I’ve come to
realize people getting started in photographing the solar system may, at first anyway,
just want to be told what to do. What
exactly can you buy and download to image the worlds of the Sun and how exactly you use it. No choices, just a simple system that works.
So, before you write me to ask, “Well, how come you didn’t
mention this telescope or this camera or this software?” I know there are
alternatives to the setup I am going to describe. What I am doing is telling
about a system that will work, and that you can modify as your experience grows.
One last caveat:
getting good pictures of the planets depends on one thing more than anything else: seeing. Atmospheric
steadiness. That trumps telescopes and cameras of the most expensive sort. If
you live in an area with constant poor seeing, there’s only so much you can
expect. Take heart, though. Most people don’t live in locations like that. Most
peoples’ seeing steadies down occasionally at least. Keep an eye out for the
sort of weather that will bring steady air, like stagnant high pressure domes,
and be prepared to take advantage of it.
How much will it cost to get into planetary imaging? Not
much if you already have a suitable telescope and mount. If you don’t, expect
to spend as much as 1000 – 1500 bucks for a usable scope and mount, or as
little as 300 – 400 for a telescope alone.
OK, let’s get to it. First step is accumulating the gear you
need…
Telescope
I don’t make a secret of the fact that I don’t use SCTs as
much as I used to, but when I go after the Moon and planets, I go back to them.
And specifically the 8-inch Schmidt Cassegrain. It brings one important thing
to the table. Lots of focal length. You can get to the 4000mms of focal length that
is where you begin for high resolution Solar System pix with the addition of a
simple 2X Barlow. One also has enough light gathering power to make exposures
reasonably short, a must if you are to defeat seeing. Finally, a Meade or
Celestron 8-inch SCT is short and light and does well on less expensive mounts.
Get an 8-inch SCT.
Meade flip mirror on SCT... |
Mount
Naturally, you’ll need a driven, tracking mount. You’ll also
find goto speeds things up a lot. You wouldn’t think it would be difficult to
get Jupiter or Saturn in the field the old fashioned way with a finder, but it
is. It’s can be hard even if you have a flip mirror. A modern goto mount can
put your quarry on the small chip of a planetary cam every stinking time.
Alt-azimuth or equatorial? A driven alt-azimuth mount is
usable, but even if you take pains with the goto alignment (a good goto
alignment improves an alt-az mount’s tracking), the tracking will be worse than
that of a decently polar aligned GEM. A German equatorial mount makes life
easier, so use one. Luckily they are cheap. A goto CG5 style mount, whether the
ASGT Celestron CG5 (used only), the newer VX, the Meade LXD-75 (used only), or the new player, the
Bresser mount from Explore Scientific, are inexpensive new and very inexpensive
used. So, get a CG5 class GEM.
Camera
The requirements for a planetary cam, the basic requirements, are two: a small chip and small pixels.
Quite a few cameras in all price ranges fulfill those requirements, but few do
it better than the ZWO Optical ASI120MC. The
“C” stands for color, as in one-shot color, which will make your life easier
when you are starting out. Just because this camera is inexpensive new, less
than 200 dollars, don’t think it is a slouch when it comes to performance. It
will deliver up to 100fps, frames per second if you keep the size of those
frames small (see below). So, get an
ASI120MC.
Barlow
You’ll need to double your SCT’s focal length by placing a
Barlow lens ahead of the camera. Which? Luckily, I’ve seen very few poor
quality Barlows of late. My choice for you is good, but it is also cheap, the
famous Orion Shorty. I’ve used one for years
and there is no downside to it.
Accessories
You don’t need too many, but you need some. First and
foremost, you need a flip mirror to make initial centering of planets easy, even with goto. This is a special star diagonal with a camera
port on its rear and a mirror that can be flipped up and down. Flip it down to
center the target in an eyepiece, flip it up to send the images out the rear
port to your camera. Flip mirrors can be adjusted so that what’s centered in
the eyepiece is centered in the camera, and what’s in focus in the eyepiece is
in focus in the camera. Which one? My choice is the SCT specific Meade flip
mirror, but it’s apparently no longer being made. That being the case, get this Vixen flip mirror; it will work fine, but it requires the purchase a
2-inch visual back for your SCT if you don’t have one.
Computer
FireCapture |
Since planet-cams must be used with a computer, you’ll need
one. Any modern PC will do; image acquisition and processing software is much
easier on computer horsepower than a modern game like Doom, for example. You’ll
either want a Windows PC or a Mac that can run Windows software, and naturally
the computer should be a laptop since you’ll be using it outside. My choice is the simple and reliable Toshiba Satellite.
Software
You’ll need to install two programs on that computer. One to
operate the camera, and one to process the resulting .avi movies into stacked
still frames. For camera control, get FireCapture.
It’s free, and while it does tons of stuff, up to and including generating
ephemerides and guiding a telescope mount, it is easy to use in simple point
and shoot fashion. Its user interface is clean and simple, and it includes a
camera simulator so you can play with it indoors. Yeah, get FireCapture.
When you shoot planets, you shoot .avi motion picture files.
When done, you stack the (good) individual frames of those movies into finished
still pictures and perform processing functions like sharpening the resulting
stills and adjusting their histograms (contrast and brightness). The program
that will do that is another piece of shareware, Registax. It is mature and easy to use in a
basic fashion.
Odds and Ends
You’ll need an IR block filter for a one-shot color camera
or images will be way too red, but the filter that comes with the ZWO camera is
quite sufficient. All else you’ll need to buy is a longer USB cable, since the
one that ships with the camera is a bit too short. Get a 10-foot USB 2.0 AM-BM cable (from your local BestBuy perhaps).
Exposure Controls on FireCapture... |
Putting it together
The rest of this is going to be surprisingly short and
sweet. To begin, set up the telescope as you normally do, but with the flip
mirror on the rear cell instead of the normal diagonal. Use a crosshair
eyepiece in the flip mirror, one that will yield a power of about 160x, a 12mm
f/l eyepiece, that is. The Barlow goes into the camera port and the camera is
inserted into the Barlow via its included 1.25-inch nosepiece. You can hook up
the camera’s USB cable now if you like or wait till you are done with the mount
alignments. You might also want to connect a serial cable to the mount if you
want to be able to adjust the telescope’s aim with the computer.
OK, next you’ll either polar align or goto align. If you are
using a Celestron mount, I suggest you do the hand control’s built-in AllStar
polar alignment routine to ensure good tracking. To do that, you’ll need to do
the goto alignment first. If you are using another brand of mount, you’ll
normally do a polar alignment first. That doesn’t need to be a drift alignment,
but should at least be a careful alignment with the GEM’s polar scope. If the
hand control has a polar alignment routine like Celestron’s, use it.
Acquiring Images
Now, goto Jupiter (or Mars or Saturn or the Moon) and center
the image in the flip mirror using the reticle eyepiece. At the computer, bring
up FireCapture. There are a heck of a lot of options, but we only want to use
the program in the very simplest manner and we’ll mostly be using the Control
(exposure) section on the upper part of the sidebar. Adjust the gain slider
there until it’s at about 75%; that will prevent images from showing the odd
artifacts that can result from lower gain settings. Then, adjust the exposure
controls until the planet looks almost bright enough but not quite, so that it
looks just slightly underexposed.
All stacked in Registax... |
Next, center the planet precisely. If you set up your flip
mirror correctly, Jupiter should be in the frame, but probably not centered.
Center it either with the HC or with an onscreen
HC. If you have ASCOM installed on the laptop, use its virtual HC for
centering. Just go to ASCOM in the settings portion of the sidebar by clicking
the little ASCOM icon, check “initialize telescope interface,” and select the mount
(and check “show hand control”) as per normal with ASCOM. If that sounds too
complicated, just use the real HC for centering. An extension cable is helpful
for that so you can sit at the computer when using the HC.
Focus up precisely. Again, if you set up the flip mirror
correctly, Jupiter should be close to being in focus, but probably not exactly in focus. One help here is
Motofocus. I had JMI’s Motofocus motor on my old Ultima C8, Celeste, and what a
joy it was to sit at the PC and watch the display while focusing with a remote control. Otherwise,
trot to the scope, adjust focus a bit, squint at the computer, and repeat as
needed till Jupe is as sharp as you can get him (if there’s a Galilean Moon in
the field, that’s a great focusing “tool”).
Finally, decide if you want to use FireCapture’s ROI, “Region
of Interest” feature or not. If you engage this by clicking ROI in the “Image”
portion of the sidebar (very top), and have selected “Jupiter” in the exposure
section, Firecapture will crop the frame to a size just big enough to contain
Jupe. That will allow the program to deliver much higher frame rates than you’d
get at the ZWO’s full resolution. As long as tracking is good enough to keep
Jupiter in the field for a minute to a minute and a half, use ROI.
Wavelets... |
There are two other
settings you need to check. Make sure “debayer”
is NOT checked in the Options section of the sidebar. As you may know, one-shot
color cameras use red, green, and blue filtered pixels to produce color images.
Normally, these pixels are combined on the fly to make a color image, they are
“debayered” as you shoot. FireCapture, however, allows you to forego
debayering, to shoot the avis as, basically, black and white images, and
debayer them, convert them to color, later. This saves computer processing
power and allows for a higher frame-rate. Also, check in the capture section to make sure "avi" is selected as the file type.
That’s the preliminaries. Now, just click the record button
in the Capture section of the sidebar, and record some Jupiter movies. How
long? About 1-minute is pretty good, especially if you are using ROI. That will
give you plenty of frames to play with but not result in huge files that can be
a problem. Shoot plenty more sequences, aiming for getting footage during the
best seeing (best circumstances are shortly after dark with the planet above
30-degrees). When you’ve got some sequences that appear to capture the planet
when it’s steady, you are done.
Processing
Next morning, the first task is to convert the .avi movies
to color. Do that using the Debayer app in the FireCapture directory (put a
shortcut to it on your desktop, since you will use it frequently). Open the
little program, leave all its settings at their defaults, and select and then
debayer all the .avi files. Debayer will place color versions of the .avis in
the capture directory of FireCapture (you can specify the directory in
FireCapture’s setup section before you do your captures).
Now comes stacking the best frames
from the sequences with Registax. You will more than likely be a little daunted when you
open the program for the first time. Don’t be. There are lots of options and adjustments,
but you really only need to perform a very few actions to use the program in
the most basic fashion:
- 1. Click “Select” (button on the upper left of the display) and choose the first debayered file. If Registax asks if you want to process it in color, respond “yes.”
- 2. Click the Align tab (below select), and push the “Set Align Points” button.
- 3. Click the Align button.
- 4. Click the Limit button when the align process is done.
- 5. Click Stack.
- 6. When stacking is finished, click “Save Image.”
- 7. Click the Wavelets tab. This is where it gets interesting. The famous Registax Wavelet filters will reveal details you wouldn’t dream were in the stacked image. How do they work? That’s a story for another day. For now, just check the boxes and adjust the sliders as shown here. This is a good starting point. Click “do all,” and see how the image looks. If it looks over processed, try backing off the sliders some.
- 8. There is no “8;” you are done. If you like, you can process Jupiter further with Photoshop or the program of your choice. Don’t have an image processing program? Registax has image processing tools. They are not as easy to use as those in Photoshop, but they work.
Comments:
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Expensive and not really much help. Shooting .avis and stacking the best frames really does the same thing, and Registax is free. ;)
I suggest testing the use of free software AS! 2. Very easy stacking, so Registax can only be used to sharpen the image in the wavelet filters. In the extamente I do like you and want to check my work here is the page: http://www.astrobin.com/users/astroavani/
Best Regards
Avani Soares
Best Regards
Avani Soares
Sorry to be late to the party. It's the end of the school year and we just finished with teacher outservice.
Uncle Rod, thank you for this post! It's perfect. Funny enough, I had just purchased a "new to me" ZWO ASI120-MC-S off of eBay the weekend before you posted this. I was reading your post just as I was getting it ready to take out for the first night. Great timing!
As always, your tips and advice are spot on. I've bookmarked this and have reviewed it while at my 'scope both times I've used this amazing little camera.
Thanks again.
Uncle Rod, thank you for this post! It's perfect. Funny enough, I had just purchased a "new to me" ZWO ASI120-MC-S off of eBay the weekend before you posted this. I was reading your post just as I was getting it ready to take out for the first night. Great timing!
As always, your tips and advice are spot on. I've bookmarked this and have reviewed it while at my 'scope both times I've used this amazing little camera.
Thanks again.
Avani, I've used that software very successfully and like it. That was not the point here, though. Rather than alternatives, the point was to talk about a simple system that works. Once a novice is familiar with their camera and process, those alternatives can be explored. :)
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