May 032016
 

Although there was no forecast for clear skies last night, it did clear up late and I got a short chance to try Saturn with the x2 Barlow.
p_Sat_011522
It was obvious that the focus was not close, but I was able to check the full capture process again. I think I had the gain adjusted too high during capture so that will be the focus of the next test. Clouds closed in fairly quickly so I was not able to do any testing other than capture.

 Posted by at 21:50
Apr 302016
 

The last two nights were the first planetary tests of my ‘new’ Point Grey solar system camera. Up till now I have only used it to image the Sun through the H-Alpha telescope. Thursday night was a shakedown run to make sure all the correct camera drivers and software were installed and to see if I could find a planet sized target with the camera’s small field of view. I did not have any problems and the end-to-end ‘process’ worked fine but the images produced by the camera were very small. It also became very obvious that I really missed focus.

p_Jup_215141_g3_ap14 p_Sat_015834_g3_ap10

 
So last night I added a x2 Barlow to the mix. It made finding the planet a little more difficult but the image size is now large enough to work with. This image of Jupiter is the best 5,000 frames of a 10,000 frame video capture through the x2 Barlow. The dark spot visible near the right edge of the planet is the shadow cast by the Galilean moon Io. The moon has not left the disk of the planet and as such is in the image but I cannot reliably pick it out. The planet is displayed in the traditional orientation with south at the top. Unfortunately, clouds moved in before Saturn rose above the tree line so I was not able to include it in last night’s test.

p_Jup_215552_g3_ap17

 
This is also the first time I have used Firecapture to record the video stream. Firecapture is free software that supports many machine vision cameras and is a very popular package for solar system imagers.

I consider last night’s test a success and will, for now, use that configuration as my standard for planetary imaging. The next step is to integrate a filter wheel and RGB filters to add color to the images.

 Posted by at 16:05