How To Do High Resolution Planetary Astrophotograhy by Damian Peach

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  • čas přidán 11. 03. 2019
  • Taking high resolution photos of planets can be difficult, but renown planetary astrophotographer Damian Peach shares his tips on how to get the most out of your imaging.
    During the Practical Astronomy Show 2019, held in Kettering, he gave his talk in the practice of high resolution astrophotography; encompassing information for beginners and higher levels alike. No doubt you'll find something informative within this lecture! Sit back, relax, and enjoy the show.
    There are a couple of transitions within the video whilst I had to stop and restart the camera (limited movie length!) but since the audio was still recording; nothing has been lost! I hope you do forgive me.
    www.damianpeach.com/
    The Practical Astronomy Show 2019 was an astronomy convention held in Kettering, Northamptonshire on the 9th March 2019. Vendors and accomplished individuals from the hobby were in attendance and talks were available from the likes of Paul Money (AstroSpace), Niels Haagh (TTS), Gary Palmer, Dr Robin Glover & Damian Peach. Suppliers such as Tring Astronomy, The Widescreen Centre, Rother Valley Optics, Altair Astro, 365 Astronomy and many more.
    practicalastroshow.com/
    The footage and audio was recorded by myself with permission from the organisers and the speakers. A lecture by Dr Robin Glover on CMOS Deep Sky Astrophotography was also recorded by myself and is available to view here • Deep Sky Astrophotogra...
    Contact:
    astrofarsography@gmail.com
    www.astrofarsography.wordpress.com
    / astrofarsography
    / astroruz
    =====================================
    Current equipment:
    Skywatcher HEQ5 Pro Belt Modded
    QHYCCD Pole Master
    Skywatcher Evostar 80ED Refractor
    Skywatcher Explorer 150P-DS Reflector
    Altair Astro Starwave 50mm Guide Scope
    ToupTek ToupCam GCMOS Guide Camera
    Bahtinov Masks
    Astro-Modded Naked Sensor Canon 450D
    Canon 760D
    SkyTech CLS-CCD Clip-In Filter
    =====================================
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Komentáře • 40

  • @AstroLaVista
    @AstroLaVista Před 5 lety +23

    I went to see a presentation by Damian a few years back, pulled up in the car park and a guy pulled up besides me in a real old banger, the engine sounded as rough as a badgers arse. I looked across and saw that it was Damian and immediately realised that he so committed to planetary imaging that he must spend all his money on it, rather than other things like cars. I do hope he has a new car by now though :) I've been a big fan of Damian ever since I saw his images actually capturing detail on the moons of Jupiter, simply amazing!

  • @brianreynolds1098
    @brianreynolds1098 Před 4 lety +11

    Damian, you're a legend! Thanks for allowing this to appear! Following your lead, been following you for many years now. Vheers!

  • @michaelschnittker7388
    @michaelschnittker7388 Před 4 lety +6

    Terrific! Thank you! Damian's photos are indeed incredible and no doubt useful for serious analysis of Jupiter and Mars as professional astronomers don't have the scope time to monitor either on a constant basis. I think of the late Dr. Donald Parker who did so much early work with film and early CCD cameras, I am certain would be most happy to see Damian's work!

  • @hudecjohn2110
    @hudecjohn2110 Před 5 lety +4

    This guy is the best, IMHO.
    As an avid, tenured amateur astronomer, who's dabbled in astrophotography, I can tell you it's not easy! I have never seen an amateur produce results equal to his. To the point that some of my peers have questioned authenticity. And the fact that he does it with relatively modest equipment makes it all the more astonishing. Hats off to Mr. peach. Best in the biz in my book!

  • @gregmckay666
    @gregmckay666 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent talk and amazing results by Damian. He is THE MAN when it comes to planetary imaging in my book.

  • @corinlewis3073
    @corinlewis3073 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm happy that you had a great time imaging the planets from my island home Barbados, I would had been there this year but of Covid-19 virus , I didn't want to take risk of infecting my 85 year old mom. Hopefully I'll be back on the island in 2021🙂🌠

  • @gnagyusa
    @gnagyusa Před 3 lety

    Excellent useful info-filled talk! Thanks!

  • @stannickle9827
    @stannickle9827 Před 3 lety

    Excellent video, I learned so much! Thanks for sharing this!

  • @galacticus9845
    @galacticus9845 Před 4 lety

    One of the best amateur astrophotographers. His DVD's are excellent also.

  • @sjpp71
    @sjpp71 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, thanks for taking the time to record it and share it, Ruzeen. As a side comment, wow, just hauling a C14 out to the backyard must be quite an undertaking... let alone taking it overseas!

  • @davidthompson3876
    @davidthompson3876 Před 5 lety

    Excellent presentation, I learnt a lot.

  • @thorshammer5166
    @thorshammer5166 Před 4 lety +1

    I know I am a little late to this video but I just want to say THANK YOU! I am just starting out and am looking forward to learning.

  • @donr6234
    @donr6234 Před 4 lety

    Wow, great info here, Thanks Ruz!

  • @SaereeNon
    @SaereeNon Před 3 lety

    Thank you very much for sharing this video. It's really helpful.

  • @I_Spaced_Out
    @I_Spaced_Out Před 5 lety +3

    I've been doing alignment points wrong in Autostakkert. I used to go with hundreds of small alignment points.

  • @alexmirza5210
    @alexmirza5210 Před 5 lety +2

    A very focused talk

  • @humlakullen
    @humlakullen Před 3 lety

    Awesome presentation...

  • @user-FokitisManos
    @user-FokitisManos Před 2 lety

    Great, essential presentation

  • @jamesw5713
    @jamesw5713 Před rokem +1

    Great presentation. Never tried it, but solar imaging, does the intensity not damage your scope and camera etc?
    Lastly regarding dew heaters. I'm always told to let your scope (mak and SCT) down to ambient to reduce turbulence in the scope. How does this not happen heating the scope with a dew heater?

  • @mycarolinaskies
    @mycarolinaskies Před 5 lety +1

    A great primer

  • @TonyCecala
    @TonyCecala Před 3 lety

    Inspiring! 🤩

  • @TheVinerman
    @TheVinerman Před 3 lety

    Deus abençoe quem traduziu!

  • @kingsbishop1479
    @kingsbishop1479 Před rokem

    26:56 I don’t want astronomy to be an unreliable hobby that is why I’m waiting on amateur adaptive optics hopefully the MATX adaptive optics will be useful.

  • @cheetahpup1787
    @cheetahpup1787 Před 2 lety

    can you capture any comets?

  • @kamalalzayer3430
    @kamalalzayer3430 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks , for the perfect lecture . I have a Celestron 14 Edge HD too & a hyperstar . Should i use the hyperstar for planets photography ? You did not mention about R + IR filters for planets photography & Methan filters . I Have also 82 & 100 grads eye pieces & 2x & 3X Barlows + Zwo ASI 174 . Should I buy the R & IR filters for plants photography ? I live in Saudi Arabia ( VERY VERY HOT & HUMID ) do I need the Atmospheric Dispersion Corrector ? I do not have it . Thanks a lot

    • @alcosound
      @alcosound Před 3 lety +1

      For planetary photography, you need long focal distance.
      A Hyperstar defeats it, as it replaces the secondary mirror.
      IR filters are always nice to use (both IR cut and IR pass). IR cut lets you record colour from your camera. IR pass (if your sensor is sensitive beyond red, like the ASI462) lets you record IR data separately, which are not as sensitive to atmospheric turbulence.
      The ADC is very useful if your planets are near the nadir.

    • @Astronurd
      @Astronurd Před 2 lety

      NO hyperstar for planets 🪐

  • @PCPointerDE
    @PCPointerDE Před 9 měsíci +1

    I would not set the gain to high. Let's say you set gain to 70% and exposure for example 5ms. It will be very hard to remove the noise. It has to be a good balanced.
    For example o set 15ms and gain of 50%. Than I get 60fps. With 55% gain and 12ms I get 80 fps. So this makes sense. To increase to 70% gain and only 10foa more would make no sense. So a good balance is the way. If you set maximum gain for Uranus or 70% for Jupiter it is also difficult to focus because you will not see the details with gain and resulting high noise. So it also needs a low noise camera for high gain.
    And btw you can get double fps but have also to double stack images to get the same sharpness without noise.

  • @rudirakete770
    @rudirakete770 Před 5 lety +2

    hello,can i share this video on my german canell for the german astrophotographers? .i name the source and credits.

    • @AstroFarsography
      @AstroFarsography  Před 5 lety +1

      Yes you can. Just link it back and give the credits and that'll be great, thank you :)

    • @rudirakete770
      @rudirakete770 Před 5 lety +1

      @@AstroFarsography we know damian as well in my astrogroups. i would upload your video and translate what you wrote in german.i dont change anything just translate.i took credits in like here and a link to the orginal source .is this ok for you ? i dont want to break any copieright.thats your work and i dont do it without your agree.thank you

    • @AstroFarsography
      @AstroFarsography  Před 5 lety

      @@rudirakete770 messaged you on Twitter :);

  • @98vwgolf
    @98vwgolf Před 5 lety

    Start wide as well. The RASA 8 + a OSC is quite amazing and affordable.

    • @Astronurd
      @Astronurd Před 2 lety +1

      The RASA is NOT a planetary scope period

    • @98vwgolf
      @98vwgolf Před 2 lety

      @@Astronurd when did I ever say it was

  • @Nottsboy24
    @Nottsboy24 Před 5 lety

    #16th like ☺👍

  • @astronautintheocean3152
    @astronautintheocean3152 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello from Ukraine🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦. Damian is an example for all Astrophographers.