Australia Hogs Transits and Eclipses in 2012

Venus transits the sun

Will you capture an image like this in June?

For those that chase solar eclipses or want to catch a great view of the Venus Transit, you will have to head to Eastern and Northern Australia this year:

  • A full view of the Venus Transit will occur June 5-6 in Eastern Asia and Eastern Australia (and various islands states in the Pacific.) The rest of us get partial views or none at all (don’t head to the Atacama, for instance!)
  • A total solar eclipse will pass over Northern Australia November 3. This makes three years in a row that the Pacific region got to view solar eclipses. (And in 2013 it will happens again!)

Those in other parts of the world who like to view and images these events will have to settle for annular solar eclipses and lunar eclipses.

For details, check into articles on Sky & Telescope, which will direct you on to further resources:

Venus Transit

2012 Lunar and Solar Eclipses

 

SBIG Image Sharing: Supernova 2011dh in the Whirlpool Galaxy by Rod Pommier

SBIG is pleased to share this set of images submitted by Rod Pommier of Portland, OR, USA. It is a before-and-after shot of Supernova 2011dh. It also comes with a nice background story about how other members of the astronomical community found and used Rod’s images to complement their own work in imaging the event with radio wavelengths.

Supernova SN201dh by Rod Pommier

Image by Rodney F. Pommier. Used by permission.

Image subject: M51, the Whirlpool Galaxy, and NGC 5195, before and after supernova SN 2011dh

Equipment used: STL 11000M, Baader Planetarium LRGB filters. Celestron Compustar C14 Telescope/Mount. with 0.75x focal reducer (f/8).

Location and date:  Pommier Observatory, Portland, OR, USA; 2011-05-08/09 (left) and 2011-06-15 (right).

Method:
Left image: LRGB exposures=184:70:70:70 minutes=7 hours:04 minutes total exposure.
Right image: Same, supplemented with LRGB=44:44:44:40 minutes=2 hours:52 minutes additional exposure, for grand total exposure of 9 hours:56 minutes.

Software used: MaxImDL, Photoshop

Comments: This image has a great background story! I was recently contacted by a group of professional European Radio Astronomers who had just imaged the supernova at radio wavelengths. To do this, they connected a network of radio telescopes in Spain, Germany, The Netherlands, Sweden and Finland using the very long baseline interferometry technique. In so doing, they made a radio telescope roughly the size of Europe that permitted them to image the supernova with unprecedented resolution, down to a fraction of a light-year. They said the equivalent would be to image a golf ball on the lunar surface. They were going to show their image in multiple European press releases. However, it is very difficult for the public to interpret what they are seeing in radio astronomy images, so they wanted to display their image alongside a visible light image of the galaxy and supernova for reference. They searched the internet thoroughly and they liked this image, taken with the STL 11000M, the best. They asked permission to use it in their press releases provided they credited me. I was happy that my amateur image was able to help this group of professional astronomers. Here are some links to a couple of the press releases:

For Spain (in Spanish):
http://www.iaa.es/sites/default/files/SN2011dh.pdf

For The Netherlands (In English. Click on the embedded images to enlarge them):
http://www.astron.nl/about-astron/press-public/news/youngest-supernova-imaged-just-after-explosion/youngest-supernova-ima

 

We hope you enjoyed this image set from Rod Pommier and the story that goes with it. If you wish to share your own images on SBIG’s blog, please click here for instructions. Of course, you are free to share your work on our Facebook community page as well!

Alan Holmes Reports on the Congreso Austral de Astrofotografia

OAA sculpture

This sculpture at the Observatorio Astronomico Andino points at the south celestial pole.

SBIG’s own Alan Holmes traveled to Santiago,  Chile last November for the Congreso Austral de Astrofotografia. The event was organized by Daniel Verschatse, Alejandro Nunez, Guillermo Yanez and Diego Cartes. The conference took place at the European Southern Observatory (ESO), with a companion star party located at the beautiful facilities of the Observatorio Astronomico Andino.

To read Alan’s full travelogue and view the photographs he took to chronicle the adventure, click here.

SBIG Image Sharing: NGC 7822 by Franck Jobard

We are pleased to share this image of NGC 7822, submitted by Franck Jobard of Montpelier, France. He is a master of the difficult art of urban sky viewing and imaging. Find his philosophy here, and click through to browse his other images.

NGC 7822

Image by Franck Jobard. Used with permission

Image subject : NGC 7822

Equipment used: ST10XME, FS60 f4.2 with focal reducer, G11 Gemini Level IV

Location and date : Montpellier (France) on 15th September 2009

Method : Ha (8*15min), SII (7*15min) and OIII (12*15min) narrowband filters

Comments: I have a homemade observatory in the center of town, and so is light-polluted. This is my challenge!

Our thanks to Franck for sharing his work. If you wish to share an image with SBIG, click here for our blog submission guidelines.

SBIG Image Sharing: A is for Andromeda by Lefteris Velissaratos

We are pleased to share another image submitted by Lefteris Velissaratos of Greece. So far, he is our most consistent participant in our blog image sharing initiative! We encourage all SBIG camera users to share images they love (and the stories behind them) in this blog space. Here are the instructions.

This image is of Andromeda Galaxy. The details of its creation are below.

Andromeda Galaxy - Velissaratos

Andromeda Galaxy ©2011 Lefteris Velissaratos - Used with permission

 

  • Title: A for Andromeda
  • Location: The dark skies of Strethi mountain Korinthia Greece
  • Camera: STL11000M -20C°
  • FSQ106EDX f5
  • Total exp. 9.5 hours
  • Ha-LRGB filters
  • Dates: 29-31 of August, 2011
  • Acquisition: CCDSoft
  • Processing: PixInsight

If you are an SBIG camera user who would like to submit an image for us to share on this blog, click here for instructions.

SBIG Image Sharing: Barnard 3 in Perseus by Chris Cook

Here is the next image in our image-sharing campaign. This image of Barnard 3 was submitted by Chris Cook (www.cookphoto.com)

Barnard 3 Image by Chris Cook

©2011 Chris Cook - Used with permission

Title: Barnard 3, LBN 601, LBN 758, LDN 1470

Type: Dark, Reflection & Emission Nebula

Constellation: Perseus

Location: Cape Cod Imaging Station – Harwich, Massachusetts

Date: October 21, 22, 26 & November 1, 2011

Exposure: LRGB = 300:130:120:120 minutes

Processing: MaxIm DL & Adobe Photoshop CS3

Telescope: Astro-Physics 130mm f6.3 Starfire EDF GT @ f5.2

Mount: Losmandy G11

Guiding: SBIG ST-4 via a Mini-Borg 60 refractor

Camera: SBIG ST-8300M w/FW5-8300 filter wheel

Camera Temp: -20°C

Filters: Astrodon Tru-Balance Gen 2 LRGB

 

Would you like to share your favorite images here on the SBIG blog? Click here for instructions. If we post your image, we will send you an SBIG tee-shirt as a thank-you for your submission!

SBIG Image Sharing: A Mosaic of the Iris Region by Lefteris Velissaratos

We are pleased to present the first of a series of images submitted for sharing on our website blog by SBIG customers. This first submission is from Lefteris Velissaratos.

♦♦♦ The image is “Picture of the month” in November 2011′s AstronomyNow magazine.

Iris Region - Two-Panel Mosaic ©2011 Lefteris Velissaratos - Used with permission

This is a 2-panel mosaic of a relief, part of the king. Is Iris a cosmic jewel floating in space? No, is just the brightest part of something bigger, the titanic faint elegant structures remains to reveal all their hidden magnificent colorful nature. In that case Iris is not the theme any more. The whole picture is!

  • Title: Iris region, Two-panel mosaic
  • Location: The dark skies above Strethi Mountain, Korinthia, Greece
  • Date: August 26-27, 2011
  • Camera: STL11000M -20°C
  • FSQ106EDX f5
  • Total exp. 12 Hours, LRGB filters
  • Acquisition: CCDSoft – Processing: PixInsight
Are you interested in sharing an image of yours? Check here for our guidelines. We look forward to sharing your work!

SBIG Introduces the New STF-8300

SBIG is excited to add the STF-8300 to its roster of innovative CCD cameras. The new Model STF-8300 is SBIG’s second-generation camera using the popular KAF-8300 CCD. What is new? Here are a few noteworthy items:

  • The STF-8300 has new, faster, electronics with 10-megapixel/second digitization rate and a full frame image buffer. A highres image will download in less than one second.
  • The camera uses SBIG’s traditional even-illumination (photometric) shutter design and adds a user rechargeable desiccant plug similar to the proven ST, STL, and STX designs.
  • Integrated 5-position and 8-position filter wheels are available as well as a new integrated, low profile, wide field off-axis guiding accessory that, with the ST-i, turns the STF-8300 into a self-guiding camera.
Click on the links below for more information.

STF-8300 Color

STF-8300 Monochrome

The STF-8300 also comes in a range of bundled product packages. Find them here.

For good measure, here is a sneak peek at the ad that will start running next month to promote our new camera. Click here to see it full-sized.

STF-8300 Intro Ad

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saving Money at the Telescope: The Real Story

Posted by Alan Holmes

An amateur interested in astrophotography has many options these days, such as modified webcams, high end digital SLR cameras, and cooled CCD cameras like ours. It does not surprise us that the amateur is often perplexed about what to buy, since good pictures taken by all of these choices can be found on the web. I hope the user can consider a few of the following points in making his purchase.

When pricing our astrophotography camera options, most of us forget to price in our most precious resource: Our time.

How much time do you want to waste each viewing night wrestling with cheaper equipment that may need more fiddling, more coddling? How many useless images do you want to struggle with as a percentage of good or even great images? How much frustration do you want to pack into your equipment bag to lug out to the viewing spot with you? How much (or little) support do you want from the manufacturer in getting the most out of your investment?

At SBIG, we never forget that your time is valuable. We work very hard to eliminate the frustrations and maximize the value you get out of each hour you spend imaging the night sky. We value your time as much as we value our own, because we are amateur astronomers like you, from the CEO on down. We understand what you seek to accomplish, and make our products to get you there more enjoyably and with better results.

Unpack the frustrations that come with cheaper cameras by packing in an SBIG camera instead.

OK. I will get off my soapbox and discuss some options in more detail!

High-end digital cameras: I have personally used a Canon 10D and was quite impressed with the images I obtained. There is an incredible amount of engineering in these products. It’s great that one can use them for general photography as well. However, they have no guiding capability, so one needs to acquire a guider to go with it. The filters are optimized for general photography, but several websites discuss how to remove the infrared blocking filter in the camera. Of course, after removing the infrared blocker, the color balance is bizzare on daylight scenes, so filter removal wrecks the camera for general photography. My opinion based on my limited experience is that these cameras are a great alternative to film astrophotography, but do not have a lot of the features that our cameras have incorporated to simplify the amateur’s task. In general, they have no focus mode, no guiding, no cooling, no shutter for taking dark frames, and, in the case of the 10D, required timing long exposures with a remote shutter release and a stopwatch. Most of the available software is not really optimized for astronomy, either. However, I don’t want to sound too negative – they are really a different type of product from ours that has substantial utility for astrophotography – just like a film camera.

Modified WebCams: Here I have stronger feelings. Most of these cameras have no cooling and were optimized for short exposures, but have been modified for longer exposures. They work, and the price is really attractive, but one is forced to sum a lot of short exposures to get a usable result on deep sky objects. They produce interesting results when used at fast F/numbers like F/3.3, where the sky background can overwhelm the read noise in exposures of 30 seconds or so, but will be disappointing at the slower F-ratios typically used when imaging the smaller objects in the sky. The results posted on the web for planets have been particularly impressive, where read noise is not such an issue. I have used these and found that I had to work pretty hard to capture what was, at the end of a half hour at the telescope and an hour of image processing, a mediocre deep sky image. If I had never taken an image before, I might have been impressed. However, an ST-402 image of similar exposure under the same conditions was dramatically better. Of course, ST-402s with color filters are more expensive, costing around $1495. I would like to point out, though, that for exposures under 5 minutes, the ST-402 will take an image the equal in sensitivity of our highly regarded STL-6303 and ST-10XME cameras – the quantum efficiency is the same, the filters are the same, the dark current is comparably suppressed, and one has a shutter for darks. Our CCDOPS software is highly optimized for astronomy, which REALLY helps. So, for $1495 you do not get a poorer camera, you get a smaller camera, with less pixels, but sensitivity as good as anything we sell.

Orion Nebula by Alan Holmes

Just for fun – an unguided ST-402 image of M42, the Orion Nebula, captured with an Orion Star Blast (4 inch aperture, 16 inch focal length - $169), mounted on a Losmandy G11 mount. This required a 30 second red, 30 second green, and 60 second blue exposure. CCD imaging is amazing!

Another point to consider is that the digital cameras and webcams are severely limited in what they can do – they are virtually all single shot color, with ambiguous digitization bit depths and unknown linearity. Our cameras all produce photometrically accurate data with careful use, and can be used by an amateur interested in participating in monitoring and search programs that are often described in the popular magazines. Lets face it – a modified webcam will never take a deep sky image to rival what can already be found all over the net, and after one realizes this after a few sessions at the telescope, discouragment will cause many to abandon the hobby. With our products you don’t have this ceiling – you can help professionals with many research opportunities, investigate spectroscopy, or use them as a highly sensitive guider. And, as I mentioned before, our larger cameras will not take better pictures of the smaller objects – you just get more sky around them.

But HEY – it’s your life! I am being a little facetious here, but the bottom line is it takes the same amount of time at the telescope regardless of which camera you use. Imaging can be a chore – dragging out the telescope and a table for the laptop, polar aligning, finding and focusing the object, taking a sequence of images while your fingers freeze, or the mosquitos feast, or something sneaks up on you from a nearby bush, and then tearing it all down in the early morning when you are tired, and spending considerable time processing the image to its limit the next day. Do you really want to save a few dollars on the camera, or do you want to know that you achieved the best image possible with your telescope and mount? Would you buy a car that would only go 55 miles an hour even if the price is very, very good?

The camera you buy today will last for years. Make the most of the precious hours you spend under a night sky by getting the right equipment the first time. As I noted above, we think your time has great value, and we value it like no other astrophotography camera manufacturer. That is why SBIG camera solutions give you superior images while simultaneously saving you time and minimizing frustrations. Folks say “you get what you pay for.” That goes in spades for astrophotography cameras!

SBIG cameras: Simply the Best Value for Serious Astronomers!

Looking Back: SBIG Interviewed at NEAF 2011

As we look forward to sharing all the news SBIG released at last week’s AIC, here is a quick look back at Sky & Telescope’s inverview with SBIG’ Ron Bissinger and Alan Holmes at this year’s NEAF. Ron talked about his plans for SBIG as its new CEO, and Alan shared details about products we had released over the previous 12 months, including the all-sky camera, the ST-i autoguider and new accessories for the ST-8300.