Thursday, July 9, 2009

Michael A. Phillips' Astronomy Lesson on Seeing, Collimation and Focusing

Why this subject?  There's not a lot of comprehensive basics to understanding the importance of these fundamental variables to Astronomy and Astrophotography.

I remember when I got started with my 8" SCT in 2005 for the Mars opposition.  I just could not see nor photograph the quality that I found on the Internet.  This was due to the main factors to be discussed in detail here:

1) Seeing
2) Collimation
3) Focusing


SEEING

Seeing as I've said is king especially for any hi-res views or photographs of planets.

What is seeing?  - This site has a good explanation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_seeing

Understanding that seeing impacts your views and photographs is important.  Perhaps even more important are how to judge seeing and how to 'predict' it.

Damian Peach has a wonderful lesson on the Pickering Seeing scale which most folks will use to say the seeing was S: 6/10  ( http://www.damianpeach.com/seeingscale.htm )

Predicting seeing is like predicting any weather, it's not 100% accurate.  Basic info is obtained on the the Clear Sky Clocks: http://cleardarksky.com/csk/

Understand that this info is not 100% and augment with a look at the jet stream which will also greatly affect your seeing conditions:

Visible satellite for clouds - only works during the day
http://www.wunderground.com/US/Region/Southeast/2xVisSatellite.html

Geostationary Satellite - aka IR nighttime cloud cover threats!

University of Wisconsin-Madison: Space Science and Engineering Center
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/geo/index.php?satellite=east&channel=ir2&coverage=conus&file=gif&imgoranim=8
and more
http://www.goes.noaa.gov/

Jetstream1 - BEST
http://weather.unisys.com/nam/init/nam_300_init.html

Jetstream2
http://www.intellicast.com/National/Wind/JetStream.aspx

Jetstream3
http://www.wunderground.com/US/Region/Southeast/2xJetStream.html

I can't stress the importance of seeing enough!



Collimation

As the owner of a Schmidt-Cassegrain I will talk mainly about it.  Thierry Legault has a great tutorial for the matter:

http://www.astrophoto.fr/collim.html 

The take away is once you've got the basics of collimation (aka USE BOB'S KNOBS!) and the out of focus collimation always make your adjustments in good seeing and using the airy disk described in Thierry's 3rd step and even use Damian Peach's charts as a reference.

If this guide appears complicated then try this rule of collimation...

it's a simple task... make it round!  :)

you can for the most part trial and error it, but the goal is the same, make it round by turning 3 knobs!  Do be careful to tighten one and loosen another to prevent over or under (aka mirrors falling) tightening of your secondary.

Also, over time you can refine your collimation, you may think you've got it right via your eyes or by metaguide, but stacking hundreds of frames in moderate to good seeing yields better results where you may go, humm, i though it was in, but it's off a  bit on the 4 o'clock position... I'll fix next time!  :)

Another good reference: http://celestialwonders.com/articles/seeing/

Focusing
Once you've got the above two steps under your belt then focusing is easy.  If time and space allow, slew to a medium bright (mag 2) star and focus on that in each channel until you see the airy disk.  Without touching the camera with respect to your OTA move back to your target and you'll see something very exquisite!

Hope this tutorial helps everyone!

Mike


Thursday, June 11, 2009

Saturn 2009.06.08 - Near perfect seeing


Object: Saturn

Planet

Origin:ObservationManager - SolarSystem Catalog 1.0
ObserverMichael A. Phillips Mr.
SiteHome
Begin2009-06-08 um 20:30:00-05:00
End2009-06-08 um 20:40:00-05:00
Seeing1 (very good)
OpticsC8i
EyepiecePowerMate (V=812.8)
FilterAstronomik LRGB Color
CameraDMK21AF04
Sitzung2009-06-08 um 20:30:00-05:00
Visual impression

  • Capture notes:
    Excellent seeing was forecast for a brief 3 hour period after sunset
    and before a drop back to average seeing.
    Fought equipment issues but got tons of great data, including a mutual
    moon event.  I wasn't sure what settings to use so I ran my regular routine
    hoping for something.

    Processing notes:
    Initially I thought I had caught the dimming of Tethys, but I think that
    because I start captures at dusk the brightness of the sky washed out the
    fainter moons like Tethys.
    I'm still not 100% happy with my routine and feel that with great
    seeing there's always more tweaking to be done!  Take good notes
    everyone!

    Observing notes:
    I didn't spend anytime visually observing as the equipment issues with the
    laptop and being excited for great seeing kept me distracted until the
    seeing went back to the usual average.


References

Sessions: 2009-06-08 um 20:30:00-05:00

Begin:2009-06-08 um 20:30:00-05:00
End:2009-06-08 um 22:30:00-05:00
Weather:Seeing: Perhaps 8-9/10 judged on Saturn only, the collapsed to 5+/10
Transparency:4/5 with a small T-storm cell ~15 mi away and HUGE one 45mi away which was VERY visible despitenot having any haze or clouds nearby.  STRANGE
Forecast: Small window at dusk of 5/5 Seeing! 
Equipment:Ubuntu 9.04 Linux and custom coriander on Lenovo T61 (Cepheus)8" Celestron C8i SCTLymax Cat CoolerDMK 21AF042.5x PowerMateAstronomik LRGB filtersTrue Tek Color Filter Wheel with visu diag
Comments:Great weather locally, but horrible in surrounding areas (see Transparency report!).I made great work of some of the local seeing on Saturn and was excited for a mutual moon event of Tethys and Mimas.I am not sure I captured it or not.Then the inevitable happened I ran out of disk space on the laptop!  Wait that was after the crash, yes linux crashes too!Sill no remote control of the laptop via the computer or long HC cable.I grabbed an external USB drive (formatted fat32) but recording at 15fps was not an issue.Moral of the story is even a short window of great seeing is worth the threat of storms and always be preparedwith a clean hard drive or spare usb drive nearby!
>> Observations <<

Observer: Michael A. Phillips Mr.

>> Observations <<

Site: Home

Longitude:35.682°
Latitude:-78.743°
Timezone:UT-300 min
>> Observations <<

Optics: C8i

Type:SCT
Vendor:Celestron
Aperture:203.0 mm
Focal length:2032.0 mm
>> Observations <<

Eyepiece: PowerMate

Vendor:TeleVue
Focal length:2.5 mm                                                    
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Filter: Astronomik LRGB

Typ:Color
>> Observations <<

CCD Camera: DMK21AF04

Vendor:The Image Source
Pixel:640x480
>> Observations <<

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