lord_of_light
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I had a chance to visit Olympic National Park last month and took some Milky Way shots from near the Hurricane Ridge Visitor Center. When I got up there at midnight there was some type of astronomy event going on with 100+ cars and lots of people at the visitor center, so I found a quieter place nearby and took some shots.
The equipment was Sony A7iii with a Sony 20mm f/1.8 lens shot at f/2 with a Star Adventurer tracker. This lens has more coma in the corners than I would like which has me interested in the new Sigma 20mm and 24mm lens, but otherwise I'm reasonably happy with this as a travel setup. The shot consisted of 20 x 1 min exposures for both the sky and foreground. My process is I set up the tracker, compose the shot, shoot the foreground with the tracker off and then turn it on to shoot the sky. I'm reasonably happy with the shot, though it's certainly not the best I've seen. The thing about it that interests me the most was the preprocessing and stacking which I did with Pixinsight.
In the past I've stacked my tracked sky exposures with Sequator and then used Photoshop to stack my foreground and merge the sky foreground together. I started that way this time, but I wasn't fully satisfied with the result. I had several problems. First off 20 mins of total exposure results in a large blurry gap between sky and foreground that needs to be filled in in some way. Normally I've use a short untracked sky shot (typically 10-30 sec exposure) for this, but balancing the color and exposure was difficult in this case and the short exposure adds extra noise to the image. In addition the Sony camera I'm using has lots of hot pixels which didn't get removed by Sequator and while I can do it in Photoshop, the process doesn't work as well as Cosmetic Correction in Pixinsight.
I didn't find alot of information online about using Pixinsight for wide angle MW shots but I did read that its stacking algorithm could handle the distortion from a wide angle lens which is what made me want to give it a try. I took a set of dark frames (no flats) and went through the calibration process with Cosmetic Correction enabled. The result was elimination of almost all the hot pixels w/o blurring the image. The foreground images were already well aligned so I was able to simply stack those using Image Integration to produce the final foreground shot. Next the calibrated sky images were Star aligned with Distortion Correction enabled and then Integrated to produce a sky stack. This worked pretty well, but there was still the large blurry gap between foreground and background so I used the GAME script to mask out the foreground from each of the sky shots and then integrate the masked images together. This allows virtually all the sky portions from each shot to be used w/o averaging in any of the masked out foreground portions from other shots. The result is a much smaller gap between sky and background with lower noise in the region. Finally, the combination of foreground and sky, plus contrast enhancement, etc... was done in Photoshop.
I think the Pixinsight method resulted in a better image than what I got from my first attempt using Sequator. That said it took alot more effort. I'm looking for a way to simplify the process. Also I had wanted to more processing in Pixinsight (i.e. use DBE to remove some of the gradients) but I found that it made the final combination of sky and background more difficult so I set that aside for now.
Milky Way over the Olympics
The equipment was Sony A7iii with a Sony 20mm f/1.8 lens shot at f/2 with a Star Adventurer tracker. This lens has more coma in the corners than I would like which has me interested in the new Sigma 20mm and 24mm lens, but otherwise I'm reasonably happy with this as a travel setup. The shot consisted of 20 x 1 min exposures for both the sky and foreground. My process is I set up the tracker, compose the shot, shoot the foreground with the tracker off and then turn it on to shoot the sky. I'm reasonably happy with the shot, though it's certainly not the best I've seen. The thing about it that interests me the most was the preprocessing and stacking which I did with Pixinsight.
In the past I've stacked my tracked sky exposures with Sequator and then used Photoshop to stack my foreground and merge the sky foreground together. I started that way this time, but I wasn't fully satisfied with the result. I had several problems. First off 20 mins of total exposure results in a large blurry gap between sky and foreground that needs to be filled in in some way. Normally I've use a short untracked sky shot (typically 10-30 sec exposure) for this, but balancing the color and exposure was difficult in this case and the short exposure adds extra noise to the image. In addition the Sony camera I'm using has lots of hot pixels which didn't get removed by Sequator and while I can do it in Photoshop, the process doesn't work as well as Cosmetic Correction in Pixinsight.
I didn't find alot of information online about using Pixinsight for wide angle MW shots but I did read that its stacking algorithm could handle the distortion from a wide angle lens which is what made me want to give it a try. I took a set of dark frames (no flats) and went through the calibration process with Cosmetic Correction enabled. The result was elimination of almost all the hot pixels w/o blurring the image. The foreground images were already well aligned so I was able to simply stack those using Image Integration to produce the final foreground shot. Next the calibrated sky images were Star aligned with Distortion Correction enabled and then Integrated to produce a sky stack. This worked pretty well, but there was still the large blurry gap between foreground and background so I used the GAME script to mask out the foreground from each of the sky shots and then integrate the masked images together. This allows virtually all the sky portions from each shot to be used w/o averaging in any of the masked out foreground portions from other shots. The result is a much smaller gap between sky and background with lower noise in the region. Finally, the combination of foreground and sky, plus contrast enhancement, etc... was done in Photoshop.
I think the Pixinsight method resulted in a better image than what I got from my first attempt using Sequator. That said it took alot more effort. I'm looking for a way to simplify the process. Also I had wanted to more processing in Pixinsight (i.e. use DBE to remove some of the gradients) but I found that it made the final combination of sky and background more difficult so I set that aside for now.
Milky Way over the Olympics
