Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
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Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
Has anyone who used live stacking had any trouble with the Full Moon in the sky?
I used SharpCap and used live stacking on nebula (Lagoon, Trifid, Swan, and Ring Nebula).
Somehow it would not stack even though I got it to get 5 second exposure by slowing down the frame rate close to 1 frame every 5 seconds.
I have had less trouble stacking with no Moon in the sky.
I used SharpCap and used live stacking on nebula (Lagoon, Trifid, Swan, and Ring Nebula).
Somehow it would not stack even though I got it to get 5 second exposure by slowing down the frame rate close to 1 frame every 5 seconds.
I have had less trouble stacking with no Moon in the sky.
Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
I no longer try deep sky imaging at full moon. The better (more sensitive) the camera is the worse the results are.
Dave
Dave
Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
Hi,
When you say "it would not stack" do you mean that it could not find alignment stars, or did it find alignment stars but very little of the nebula was visible even after stacking?
Brian
When you say "it would not stack" do you mean that it could not find alignment stars, or did it find alignment stars but very little of the nebula was visible even after stacking?
Brian
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Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
Have a look at the last entry in this post viewtopic.php?f=12&t=1153&start=10 for some ideas on settings I had to change to get stacking working. I don't really use live stack much, there are people in the forum who are much better with this tool.
Dave
Dave
Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
Hi,
All else being equal the Moon just raises the level of sky brightness which puts a limit on the amount of nebulosity that you can see. In other words you will only be able to see the brighter parts of the nebula, not those faint wisps when the Moon is set. The nebulae that you listed are fairly bright so unless the Moon is right on top of them I think you should be able to capture them. It won't be APOD-quality but you should be able to stack.
My recommendation is to double your exposure from 5s to 10s. Lengthening the exposure increases the signal-to-noise ratio of the stars which might be enough to satisfy the star alignment algorithm. I know that sounds counter-intuitive especially when the sky is bright due to the Moon or light pollution but going from 5s to 10s should still give you enough headroom to capture nebulae. Be mindful however that if you keep increasing further then it can lead to a washed-out frame. Use your judgement and experiment!
Brian
All else being equal the Moon just raises the level of sky brightness which puts a limit on the amount of nebulosity that you can see. In other words you will only be able to see the brighter parts of the nebula, not those faint wisps when the Moon is set. The nebulae that you listed are fairly bright so unless the Moon is right on top of them I think you should be able to capture them. It won't be APOD-quality but you should be able to stack.
My recommendation is to double your exposure from 5s to 10s. Lengthening the exposure increases the signal-to-noise ratio of the stars which might be enough to satisfy the star alignment algorithm. I know that sounds counter-intuitive especially when the sky is bright due to the Moon or light pollution but going from 5s to 10s should still give you enough headroom to capture nebulae. Be mindful however that if you keep increasing further then it can lead to a washed-out frame. Use your judgement and experiment!
Brian
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Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
I have Revolution Imager R2 and the maximum exposure is 5.12 seconds.oopfan wrote: ↑Sun Oct 07, 2018 7:51 pm Hi,
All else being equal the Moon just raises the level of sky brightness which puts a limit on the amount of nebulosity that you can see. In other words you will only be able to see the brighter parts of the nebula, not those faint wisps when the Moon is set. The nebulae that you listed are fairly bright so unless the Moon is right on top of them I think you should be able to capture them. It won't be APOD-quality but you should be able to stack.
My recommendation is to double your exposure from 5s to 10s. Lengthening the exposure increases the signal-to-noise ratio of the stars which might be enough to satisfy the star alignment algorithm. I know that sounds counter-intuitive especially when the sky is bright due to the Moon or light pollution but going from 5s to 10s should still give you enough headroom to capture nebulae. Be mindful however that if you keep increasing further then it can lead to a washed-out frame. Use your judgement and experiment!
Brian
I was able to see the nebula with no trouble despite the Full Moon and 5 second exposure. Changing the curve around helps greatly.
I just like using live stacking to get cancel out the noise.
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Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
I did some starwatching last night. I was able to use live stack with no problems in star rich areas of Cassiopeia and Cygnus. I tried live stacking on NGC 253, M33, Helix Nebula, and Abell 262 and it did not stack. There were stars clearly visible. Some are closer to the horizon and the seeing was not that great. I have used live stack with no trouble when the seeing is good. For me, it is Black Level Threshold and turned off FWHM. I found Digital Gain was not useful. Adjusting the Histogram is helpful. It can bring out more details.
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Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
I did some video astronomy with a near Full Moon. I was able to live stack with no problems. Fiddling around with the curves and color balance helps a lot. Also, if you go black and white and use a deep red filter, it cuts through the light pollution.
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Re: Live Stacking With Full Moon In The Sky
Wow, old post but I will chime I'm anyhow. I am new to SharpCap and astrophotography in general and had the same issues when I started, frames wouldn't stack and just kept being ignored. SharpCap advised that the issue was that it could not align, what worked for me was to play with the live-stack 'Alignment' tab settings, increase min star with, increase black level threshold and digital gain until it all starts to work again. You will need to play with this to suit your location and setup. You may also need to adjust this depending on the target and available stars. Once this is done, frames only drop as you would expect, while dithering (ensure 'Reduce Exposure While Dithering' is on) and if frames are genuinely not aligned should guiding be lost, clouds roll by etc...Otherwise, live-stacking with SharpCap is virtually bullet-proof.RMSQueenMary wrote: ↑Sat Oct 06, 2018 8:51 pm Has anyone who used live stacking had any trouble with the Full Moon in the sky?
I used SharpCap and used live stacking on nebula (Lagoon, Trifid, Swan, and Ring Nebula).
Somehow it would not stack even though I got it to get 5 second exposure by slowing down the frame rate close to 1 frame every 5 seconds.
I have had less trouble stacking with no Moon in the sky.
Cheers,
Bill.