A few days ago I took lots of pics using SharpCap to control my ZWO ASI2400MC-Pro camera. The goal was to make a 2x2 mosaic of the Rosette Nebula. After hours of processing in Photoshop, I was able to get a nice mosaic...
https://vanderbei.princeton.edu/images/ ... -33pct.jpg
It was a challenge because the left two images had a very different coloring from the right two images. Here's how things looked before recoloring...
https://vanderbei.princeton.edu/tmp/NGC ... -20pct.jpg
I'm very puzzled why the colors don't match. All I did was take a 35 minute sequence of 30-second exposures (saved every 5 minutes) in one corner, then I turned paused the sequence capture, went to LiveView with 1 second exposures, repositioned the scope to a different corner and then restarted the sequence capture. Did I do something wrong? Is there a better way to capture mosaics?
Color balance while making a mosaic
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Re: Color balance while making a mosaic
Hi,
I suspect that the most likely explanation is conditions for observing changing during the imaging session, leading to a change in the sky background brightness between the different areas. Things that could cause this include
* The transparancy of the atmosphere changing - ie thin cloud arriving or moving away
* The movement of the target over the imaging period - perhaps rising higher in the sky or dropping lower into a zone of stronger light pollution.
With the background potentially mixed in with the image data, getting consistent colour balance from different panels may be tricky.
cheers,
Robin
I suspect that the most likely explanation is conditions for observing changing during the imaging session, leading to a change in the sky background brightness between the different areas. Things that could cause this include
* The transparancy of the atmosphere changing - ie thin cloud arriving or moving away
* The movement of the target over the imaging period - perhaps rising higher in the sky or dropping lower into a zone of stronger light pollution.
With the background potentially mixed in with the image data, getting consistent colour balance from different panels may be tricky.
cheers,
Robin