Captured 11th May 2022 around 21:00 (just after sunset). What was supposed to be a clear night was spoilt by intermittent high cloud. The sky looked clear but the images during capture had wildly varying histograms. The Moon was 77% waxing at 42° elevation.
Celestron AVX mount, Celestron C8 SCT, IR685 filter, Skyris 618M CCD camera, JMI motorised focuser. All captures were 7200 frames @ 120fps, SER, MONO8 ~2.5ms exposure and gain=250. Autostakkert to stack best 50% with drizzle 1.5 and Registax 6 for sharpening, gamma, contrast and brightness.
- 4-images.JPG (134.54 KiB) Viewed 695 times
- Clavius was captured with a 0.63x reducer.
- Philolaus is the crater in shadow at the rim on the Plato image.
- Rupes Recta is the dark scar near the centre of the image.
- The wildly varying brightness of the images can be attributed to ever changing thin cloud.
One Clavius capture was hit badly by intermittent cloud but there is something to learn from the processing. In the Quality Graph, the grey line is quality of frames captured in time of capture order. The green line is quality of frames sorted in descending order of quality. The hit from thin cloud can clearly be seen. With this being a 2 minute capture, I had 14,400 frames to use. I decided to stack the best 10% (which still gave me 1,400 frames to stack). By stacking less, I was able to salvage something.
- AS3.JPG (282.21 KiB) Viewed 695 times
Here are the Registax settings used.
- RS6.JPG (243.52 KiB) Viewed 695 times
No other software was used for processing.
Dave