Tristimulus
Veteran Member
We often have severe and fast turbulence (50hz or faster) ereasing every fine detail. When photographing the moon through a telescope the images are smeared and stacking programs do not cope with the distorted images. Jupiter show two blurred belts. Saturn show the ring but no detail.Just want to know when you call the atmosphere or seeing condition bad/poor?Not at all!I hope your post isn't a joke or sarcastic about me,If so, go ahead and take advantage of the conditions at your location. Get what you need. If determined you will get the first class images you are longing for.How can i measure or determine the atmosphere at my site?Just thinking:
For high resolution deep sky imaging focal lenghts between 500mm and 800mm should do well coupled with the ordinary 4 - 6 micron pixel size. Usually a plate scale around 1 to 2 arc seconds per pixel (that is in the 400 - 800mm ballpark for 4.1 micron pixels, for cameras like my Canon 7DII). Atmospheric turbulence will usually (unless beeing at the few world class observatory sites around) be the limiting factor.
If going for a larger telescope a good mount is mandatory. Get a high quality mount if you can afford one (my choice is the Vixen SXP mount, moderate locating capacity but smooth and well designed, the first mount - in my case - giving 101% satisfaction). Take a good look around, one man's favourite mount is another man's lemon and stinker...
For tracking moderate focal lenghts (like the white bright telephoto lenses) the Astrotrack or Fornax star trackers might do - remember that stacking 30-60sec sub exposures is as good as fewer longer exposures when using modern CMOS cameras.
For high resolution solar, lunar and planetary images the atmosphere might be the limiting factor. In my location we have lively turbulence and getting good planetary images is possible only a few night every year. We get images with moderate resolution, never high resolution, from my site. Usually the resolution - limited by the atmosphere - is bad or very bad. No dream location for this kind of work - so the solution is to have fun, and simply skip plans about stunning high resolution solar, lunar and planetary images from here.
Still - despite no chance to get world class results - astronomy is a dear hobby here.
So:
How is the atmosphere at your site?
You can fight whatever you want, but nature always win! ;-)
I can't tell exactly, but if i have to lie then i can say that i can see the planets as dots by my naked eye crystal clear, very very bright, and once looked at 9.25 with i don't know eyepiece and the view was just out of world, as i said, crystal clear, no flickering, no blurry, even in one hazy night a bit we were able to see the moon and planets as if there is no haze, and there are room for magnification, and i have only ST80, i did shoot the moon in motion or still and it was like steady, but are those all not enough to tell how good or bad the atmosphere?
No wind, no clouds but now we have clouds because it is the season, but most of the year no clouds, also no rains only few weeks between Dec and March, but if i am talking about solar system only not DSO then i can see them clear, so i am sure i can have high magnification for it.
I don't know where do you locate, i think we aren't in same atmosphere, i live in a dry normal average and very hot climate, it means seeing can be fine in most times for us.
Wish you luck and happy hours under a starry sky.
If god gifted you with a stable nature, then the devil must have had some fun at my place. We have warm and bright summer nights, dark and cold winter nights, fog, mist, rain, snow, wind and layers of cloud - clear dark nights are few and far between.Sure nature always win, but GOD gifted us with stable nature and no disaster like storms or snow or heavy rains, but sure we have extreme heat and humidity during summer, but we managed many days and nights for visual or astro if possible, i swear i did shoot Saturn once with my Canon lens only and DSLR, it was so small and no details at all because it was super bright, i did quick editing and despite there are no details yet but surprisingly i gave me the shape of Saturn immediately, so i can imaging if i have narrower aperture maybe and shot as video and stacking i can definitely resolve details.
But we have a rich nature and varied weather patterns - a good place to live for us bored with every day beeing like the yesterday. And to top that, stars appear now and then!
This forum is international.
You should have heard us Norwegians having fun and joking, we can be merciless in a very friendly way! So if beeing diffuse, it is simply based on cultural difference! ;-)
Find it good that some have splendid conditions for astronomy, simple as that!
i still can't tell the exact or accurate atmosphere, but from what i hear from others i think we have less crazy weather, we have clouds and rains, but that is only in winter which is mostly between November up to March, and not everyday cloudy anyway, but from late March or April until October we have the sun burning us and clouds-free sky for long time, and the moon is crystal clear, and planets during summer are stronger than our house lights considering how far they are, hehehehe
When the conditions are bad, there is no gain going above 60mm aperture for lunar and planetary work - and even this tiny aperture is severely limited by nature!
That is what is bad seeing is here.
In bad cases even deep sky images taken with a measly 135mm focal lenght show bloated stars. My longest focal lenght for deep sky is 530mm - and rarely do this setup resolve to the limit when using my Canon 6D with 6.6 micron pixels.
So bad seeing is limiting what I can acheive with modest telescopes and focal lenghts here.
Getting something like a C11 would be a complete waste in my case.
But still having lots of rewarding fun!
I can tell if our weather or condition here is good or bad if you define "poor"/bad condition then i can compare or tell if we have factors of bad seeing, maybe i am wrong and we have also moderate/poor seeing condition.
another assumption, when i started astronomy this year i was searching about anything astronomy in my country, a club or group or whatever, and i came across an observatory in the capital, not sure if it is around the desert or the city, but the sky is the same in the whole city, only difference is that in city there are light pollution and in desert it is LP, and that observatory have 16" scope, i doubt if there is only good and any another place in the country is bad, and if it is fine to use 16" then anything lower or less can be definitely fine, and from another forums some told me that the closer you get to equator the better condition you can have, so that those big names or rewarded known planetary photographers are using locations near of the equator, we are about 25 degree above equator, and also the locations they used are very near to the water surface, i am also not very far from sea or water surface, even with bad seeing condition i will never give up, Venus in summer every morning before sunrise is strong shining, i swear i can have it sharp no matter what, and i always see Jupiter also very very bright in the sky from anywhere in my city, and when i looked at it through C9.25 before it was really amazing clear view, the bands and the moons, does the visual different than imaging?
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