Saturn & Jupiter Photography by simple DSLR (HINDI)

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2024
  • Simple amateur guide to click photograph of Saturn and Jupiter with any normal DSLR with 300 mm lens. No telescope required. Use any astronomy app to find Jupiter and Saturn in the sky. You will be able to see the rings of the Saturn and moons of Jupiter in the final photograph. No telescope required. Video in Hindi.
    Nikon D3500 with 18-55mm & 70-300mm lens
    Rs.53,800/- Amazon amzn.to/3zdcklm
    All best Nikon Cameras & Lens amzn.to/3znqVLn
    Original Reference photo by D3300 at 300 mm ISO 100 and 1/13 shutter Auto focus - in very clear sky.
    drive.google.com/file/d/1ilXR...
    Thank You! Please Like and Subscribe for interesting guides.
    #Saturn #Jupiter #DSLR #300mm
    Overview
    Jupiter is a massive planet, and with the right focal length of lens, can showcase interesting surface details. A camera lens with at least 300-400mm is needed for this.
    With adequate magnification, Jupiter shows off cloud bands on its surface, along with the Great Red Spot. The rotation of the planet is also observable and can be photographed over the course of one night.
    You also may notice the 4 largest moons that orbit Jupiter, and their changing positions each night.
    There are few sights that are more memorable than that of Saturn. This planet is definitely a crowd favorite. Unfortunately, a wide-angle camera lens will not show much more than a pale yellow star with a noticeable glow.To see and photograph the rings of Saturn, much more focal length and magnification is needed However, the pale yellow color of Saturn contrasts the red of Mars, which sets it apart in photographs and makes it easier to identify. It is possible to capture a quick photograph of Saturn through the eyepiece of a telescope with enough aperture. This is called eyepiece projection astrophotography, and involves holding your digital camera or smartphone up to the eyepiece objective.

Komentáře • 44

  • @axelgranzini3505
    @axelgranzini3505 Před 3 lety +5

    I wish I understood what you were saying but I still gained information! Thanks!

  • @abl1699
    @abl1699 Před rokem +1

    Thanks. Good video. Encouraging for a person interested in astrophotography.

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před rokem +1

      Thanks a lot for watching.

  • @madhavsharma6643
    @madhavsharma6643 Před 3 lety +2

    happy to see someone more interested so much in astrophotography

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety

      Thanks, I'm just amateur balcony astro photographer. This hobby is quite expensive, but I'm always trying to find cheaper ways to do it.

  • @k12musiczz29
    @k12musiczz29 Před 3 lety +1

    Namasthe baya nice vidieo love from south india

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety

      Thank you for watching. Greetings to you from Rajasthan. 👍🙏

  • @buddhusudhu1332
    @buddhusudhu1332 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you...i tried and saw moons of Jupiter 🙏🙏🙏

  • @ManishFrenchStudio
    @ManishFrenchStudio Před 3 lety +2

    Superb video 🎉🎉 thank you for sharing 🙏😀💖...

  • @StatusForYOU123
    @StatusForYOU123 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank You bhai, will try ....

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching. As of June you will only get to see Saturn and Jupiter at around 2-3am. Use any related mobile app.

  • @souvikroychoudhury8698

    Thanks for the information

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for watching 👍👍

  • @mayurvalvi13
    @mayurvalvi13 Před 3 lety +1

    Thankyou Bhai ! I'll try this 💯🤝

  • @mayanknagpal5989
    @mayanknagpal5989 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you paji 🙏

  • @Adithiyanvenkat
    @Adithiyanvenkat Před 3 lety +1

    this is super useful! because atm jupiter and saturn are at the closest since 800 yesars!

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety +1

      When I made this video in June they were very very far from each other.

  • @amitshetty6359
    @amitshetty6359 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the clarity, was trying to click Jupiter two days back

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching.. Btw I recently realised you can get good pics with moons when Jupiter is low on the horizon. You'll get better balanced brightness of Jupiter and its moons.
      Good luck!!

    • @amitshetty6359
      @amitshetty6359 Před 3 lety

      @@InfoDays I once managed to click the Jupiter moons with 18-55 lens, but have been unlucky get click one with 70-300mm lens....guess been shooting in wrong locations and time

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety

      @@amitshetty6359 It's all hit and trial. Good luck to you.

  • @ashish_z9
    @ashish_z9 Před rokem

    Hi Paji, can I use my S22 ultra periscope telephoto lens (230 mm focal length) to capture these?

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před rokem

      I also have S22 but haven't tried. Moreover since the sensor and lens of S22 is smaller than a dslr it will capture less light and most probably it will not focus or give a really blurry dark outcome. But you should definitely give it a try.

    • @ashish_z9
      @ashish_z9 Před rokem

      @@InfoDays I tried I think what I captured were neptune and uranus. On manual settings, I opened the sensor for 30 seconds, the image was blurry but one can make out the planets!

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před rokem

      @@ashish_z9 Then surely you could get something out of Saturn and Jupiter. Do share images if you manage to get good results.

  • @shreya.mathur
    @shreya.mathur Před 2 lety

    I captured a video of Jupiter using NIKON COOLPIX P900, processed it and got 1068 usable frames, then stacked 95% of it using PIPP and Autostakkert. I can see veryyyy faint belts now. But I'm unable to bring them out definitely. I tried using Registax6, went right above my head.
    Can you please recommend me ways/tips to edit these pictures and get a clearer image.

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 2 lety

      Hi, I'm not an expert in this field but what I can understand is that P900 has 1/2.3 inch sensor and using its optical zoom doesn't do much justice to detail. The fact is that if the lens captures the detail then only you can bring them out correctly. Jupiter is also very bright and at times over exposer reduces details. You may want to recapture it again at different places in the sky and in different weather conditions. I somehow got better single shots when it is coming near horizon as compared to 90 degrees up. It really depends upon that time of the night. I also suggest you to contact anyone who is using the same camera to get better input.

  • @pasta8411
    @pasta8411 Před 2 lety

    when and where is saturn visible ( which direction ). I am new to astro photography so I don't have much idea. Please help.

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 2 lety

      Please use any app like Skymap to find direction of Saturn or Jupiter. It may be currently visible only late in night. In summers or after June it is clearly visible in evening time till night in west direction.

    • @pasta8411
      @pasta8411 Před 2 lety +3

      @@InfoDays Thank You so much 👍👍

  • @AbhishekSen
    @AbhishekSen Před 3 lety +1

    Saturn and Jupter ki pics ke liye ISO alag alag kyun rakhna hai ji?

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety +1

      Only at higher ISO you will be able to see the moons of Jupiter. At higher ISO Saturn will come too bright without much smooth ring detail, and since it will be very small, you will not be able to resize it further without loosing quality. It depends upon the camera & lens you use. You could experiment a little. .

  • @sauhardbatra8729
    @sauhardbatra8729 Před 3 lety +1

    Sir i too captured the saturn but ...how to process it?

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety +1

      If you have captured it in a single frame just like I have done (with rings and planet visible, like pin head size) , then enlarge it a few 100 percent (till it doesn't get too much distorted) and use simple contrast, sharpness and color corrections. Use minimum 300mm lens with max resolution. I have also given the original image I captured in the description. I used pixlr.com/x/ for editing later.

    • @sauhardbatra8729
      @sauhardbatra8729 Před 3 lety

      @@InfoDays sir it's not clear as yours ...i have mine with jupiter below it ... although it's not visible ...but saturn is minutely visible....so how do i process it now ... right now i have to use screenshot of the image

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety +1

      @@sauhardbatra8729 Because of the very bright light from Jupiter, Saturn may be getting out of focus. You could try higher shutter speed 1/25 to 1/60 with ISO 100. Tripod is a must. I know it will be very challenging taking 2 planets - one very bright and quite dull. Only possible with trial and error. Best of luck.

    • @sauhardbatra8729
      @sauhardbatra8729 Před 3 lety +1

      @@InfoDays thanks a lot sir

  • @123junu
    @123junu Před 2 lety

    Highly informative video.....
    Nicely explained....
    I will also try....
    Got a Nikon D 5400 and D 3200
    Need to learn a lot....

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks and good to know. Keep experimenting. Best wishes. Sorry for late reply.

  • @aldinelt7214
    @aldinelt7214 Před 3 lety

    Why are all the titles and stuff in English, but you don't speak a word of it?

    • @InfoDays
      @InfoDays  Před 3 lety

      In India most of us speak and read in both English and Hindi. This channel is in Hindi but I have put titles in English for Indian regions who cannot read Hindi but can understand the same. Sorry for the inconvenience.