20x1min exposures to capture the great Orion nebula
I'm delighted I was able to capture this after driving only 1 hr away from home, 70+ kms, at an altitude of 2200m.
For capturing the image I use the iOptron sky tracker, this is an equatorial mount that counter acts the earth rotation and therefore long exposure can be taken avoiding star trailing, care should be taken to have the tripod level and then aligning the mount towards the north star.
It has been discussed here before but to obtain this kind of images i use a program called deepskystacker, freeware for windows, besides the light frames ( that is the actual photos of the object being captured) a number of other photos are used to reduce noise:
- dark frames, taken with the same exposure as the light frames, but with the lens cap on, it is important to shoot this right after the light frames, so the sensor is at the same temperature as the light frames, these are used to detect noise levels, and hot pixels
- offset frames. again with the lens cap on same ISO as light frames, shot at the highest shutter speed , 1/8000 for the D800
- flat frames, used to correct vignette, shot of a clear surface at the correct exposure, the sky works well if it is clear
deep sky will produce an image that often needs adjustments to get anything visible, I save this to a 32 bit TIF.
I'll continue post processing in PS, using ACR to convert the TIF to 16 bits, it works like an HDR image, with lots of flexibility, truly amazing
Since our eyes do not see the colors captured by the camera, post processing color is completely up to you.
This is my third time shooting Orion, last year in January, this year in February, both times in a very dark location, and just recently on Apr 14 in a location just 70kms from a large city with lots of light pollution, not ideal, but it worked well even with a fairly short exposure of 20 minutes
Also worth noting, and this is a heavy crop from the 36mp image I'm only using 910 x 910 pixels