Technical photographs

Star trails


Figure 1: Corners of the photograph of the Omega nebula.


The star images in the corners of this photograph are nearly point symmetric. In the upper right corner one sees a small deformation which obviously depend on the spectral type and can nearly be compensated by the introduction of the Risley prism into the optical path. The different spectral distribution of the incoming light, sometimes are shorter sometimes are longer wavelength dominant, is split by dispersion into small spectra of different length.

NGC 2683 – the begin of our work in the field around refraction, dispersion and alignment of the hour axis


Figure 2: NGC 2683, exposure 70 minutes, d= 33.4o, local hour angle at the begin t= 3h10m.


The star trails in this photograph of NGC2683 are different in length and direction. The star trails in region above the center and in the upper right corner are acceptable while in the other regions they are not.

Correction of the dispersion on a RGB photograph


Figure 3: Fomalhaut 10.6o above horizon. On the left upper corner star image with a webcam and then clockwise the three different color channels red, blue and green.


The dispersion splits the star light into the spectral components. Close to the horizon the dispersion has a large effect and can be easily observed visually. If one takes a photograph with a webcam or an RGB CCD then the dispersion can be partly compensated by a relative movement of the three color channels.


Figure 4 Same as fig. 3 (left) and the moved color channels (right). The resulting star image has the size of the image in the blue channel. The remaining signal outside of the main image is due to the IR and red part of the photons which pass the blue filter. These parts can not be removed easily.


The result is not overwhelming because Fomalhaut was photographed for demonstration purposes at an elevation of about 10.6o above horizon. For shorter zenith distance the correction work is far better.


Figure 5: Mars on August 28th, 2003 at 00:10 UTC. Raw Single shot (left), with dispersion correction, with adjusted brightness and unsharp masked (right).


Mars was only about 27o above the horizon when it culminated. That is the reason why the opposite edges are colored blueish (upper) and red/yellowish (lower). At the north edge of the South polar ice cap one can observe another blueish edge. Like in the previous case one can correct the dispersion by moving the three color channels. This can be done manually (“by eye”) or one calculates the number of pixels and move it according to that in the direction of the parallactic angle towards the zenith. In this way the photograph of Saturn has been processed.


Figure 6: Saturn at the zenith distance of 46o, not place for high resolution photography. The dispersion is easily visible on the edges of the ring and on the body of the planet itself. The tilted straight line (from the lower part to upper left) indicates the direction to the zenith.


In fig. 6 the color channels are moved by the amount indicated by the red, green and blue straight lines. The result is still quite acceptable.


Figure 7: Like fig. 6, but 5 single shots were added together. In case where one is a little bit generous one can recognize the gap between the rings.



Comments, questions, corrections: markus.wildi@one-arcsec.org

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