Adapting a Webcam for Astrophotography 74
Alien54 writes "Here's a guy who has done well taking digital photographs of the planets using not only a regular digital camera, but also using an old greyscale Quickcam. Lots of pics, of course, and some very nice shots of Mars and all the rest. He also has some higher end gear. See also these other related pages (link 1, link 2, link 3) Also worth looking at is the website of the QuickCam and Unconventional Imaging Astronomy Group"
Even better. (Score:5, Funny)
You think that's something? I have obtained pictures of the surface of Mars by connecting a light sensitive detector to my Apple IIe that maps it's output to an ASCII-art graphic on the green monitor. It's been doing that since 1988. Of course it may just be a bad display chip.
Public Schools (Score:1, Insightful)
Of course, with all the politically correct crap they are required to teach, when would they have the time...
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I yam Popeye of the Borg. Prepares ta beez askimiligrated.
Re:Public Schools (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Public Schools (Score:1)
The book publishers aren't going to write a book that satisfies the 'creationist' requirements for a few school districts, and only sell a few hundred copies. They will put that into the book they sell to all the school districts.
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Hell bent on saving the Damned.
It means. . . (Score:2)
It has meant this since it's first known published appearance in 1798 when it was coined in order to form a distinction between the American *government* and the American *people.*
A distinction still valid today.
In the 70's the left adopted the term and began to apply it in a reductio ad absurdum manner, but did not, in essence, alter its meaning.
The fact that is now used in a derisive manner not only by the right but by the middle is only an indication of how far the left has pushed the meaning, not that it has essentially altered.
KFG
Have you ever heard of . . . (Score:2)
That kind of politically correct crap.
You don't think of that stuff as "politically correct"?
See how well they've done it?
KFG
Re:Have you ever heard of . . . (Score:1)
Half of what is required learning in public schools on history is watered down, and the other half are the hold over myths such as old George's axe rampage.
Here's a few more myths to dispell since we are veering off topic.
In God We Trust. Not the motto our nation was founded on. Added during the cold war to make sure we appeared more rightious. Same goes for the "Under God" in the pledge. The US was not founded by your modern friendly, though annoying, Christians, but by criminals, religious fanatics, outcasts, and profiteers. The settling (stealing) of the US led to the deaths of 20+ million Native Americans (Not to mention the slave trade, but that is full of it's own myths too.) through disease, starvation, murder, and warfare. I might add that's more than Hitler managed to kill.
I would love to see little tid-bits like that in the history books. Would make History class easier to pay attention in.
Re:Have you ever heard of . . . (Score:2)
I'm sure it is more than Hilter managed to kill, he wasn't particularly interested in killing Native Americans. He did however manage to kill [carpenoctem.tv]6-14 million Jews, and about 20 million Russians. I'm not belittleing the evils perpetrated against native americans, I'm just saying Hilter really was a particularly evil guy.
Re:Have you ever heard of . . . (Score:1)
Re:Public Schools (Score:1)
Mike
Re:Public Schools (Score:1)
Anticipating the Slashdot Effect .... (Score:5, Informative)
http://216.239.57.100/search?q=cache:vccbQq0yX5
Impressive (Score:1, Troll)
Cool ... now what about the micro? (Score:2)
What an excellent educational application. It has me thinking of setting up a webcam of one of those not-so-new-fangled Intel Microscope's [gizmodo.net]. Only question is
It also makes me wonder if there is any way for the Joe Q. Average geek to take feeds from some of that old NASA hardware floating about in space and streaming that online.
I did remarkably the same thing a few years ago... (Score:4, Interesting)
Nice digicam pictures (Score:4, Informative)
Shame about the expensive telescope requirement, though.
Re:Nice digicam pictures (Score:2, Interesting)
That picture was taken on a bad night, with an ancient catalogue telescope that has a dirty mirror. The computer used to capture the frames was a pentium 133 running win95. Then put the image together using paint. I've scaled it down here. The camera itself was one of those tiny near-infra red security cameras.
Spot the difference!
Re:Nice digicam pictures (Score:1)
This one [rr.com] is my favorite of the ones up there now but there are others that aren't up there anymore or never were. Including some really nice ones taken with a modified B&W QuickCam probably 4-5 years ago. I'd have to ask him to get the correct dates. He still has the Modified QuickCam but since he got his SAC camera, I don't think he uses it much anymore.
astrophotography rules (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:astrophotography rules (Score:1, Insightful)
Astrophotographers are persistent (Score:5, Interesting)
Astrophotographers loved it, though, and a French astro club even recreated the page from a browser cache (!) and put up a backup: How to disassemble a quickcam [club-internet.fr], even Connectix tech support mentioned it to their users from time to time.
I am still receiving questions about the procedure described on that page, more than five years later...
Re:Astrophotographers are persistent (Score:2)
Re:Astrophotographers are persistent (Score:2)
And: Every CCD cam has an infrared filter.
Re:Exporting our loss of privacy? (Score:1)
Webcam astronomy has already been on Slashdot (Score:5, Informative)
Webcam astrophotography (Score:4, Informative)
Quickcam? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Quickcam? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, it could also be that the color quickcam's CCD isn't as good as the grayscale's.
Re:Quickcam? (Score:1)
This is actually the case. To be honest, I haven't touched my old quickcams since, oh, probably kernel 2.0.5... but one thing i did notice is how bad the color's images were compared to the b&w.
It was explained to me at the time that it had more to do with the hardware than the CCD. Since most used the parallel port, they were hampered by bandwidth. Of course, they were expected to give the same color framerate as the b&w cams, so the hardware sends out lower quality frames to compensate.
As an aside, I used my b&w cam with my celestron refractor to get some pretty neat shots of the moon and such. All of which have been lost... i'm sure their on one of the hd's, but who knows which one...
more info in case above links are /.-ed (Score:2)
And this has been posted on slashdot before, that's where I first found this link. Not trying to karma whore, this is just a great site that deserves mention.
Astrophotography (Score:2, Interesting)
yes, I'm a spoilsport (Score:1, Insightful)
Basically, anything that detects photons will do the job. Sure, these photons are quite low-intensity, but that's no problem if you have a nice top of the range Schmidt-Cassegrain [astrosurf.com] to help you along. Just point it at the star, start your motorised equatorial mount and wait as long as it takes for a nice clear image to pop up. (And you can take your time, you've got all night.) And even if this doesn't work too well, you can use photo-editing suites to pick out the finer details you were after.
Again, I'm not trying to steal this guy's thunder. (I'm probably just jealous of his 10" telescope after all
Re:yes, I'm a spoilsport (Score:2)
There is also the issue of picture exposure (especially if the imager doesn't have the capability for a variable shutter speed) and how it relates to the performance of the telescope as well as the seeing conditions under which the pictures are taken.
The calculations are fairly easy, and if anyone really wants to see them I can follow up with an example. I would even be bold enough to say that if you have a good handle on what your telescope can do, you can probably select an inexpensive camera that will give you respectable results for even modestly priced telescopes.
why the multi exposure? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:why the multi exposure? (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, this is all theorizing here. I have no experience with astrophotography, and I just learnt about the Bayer pattern recently.
Re:why the multi exposure? (Score:3, Informative)
There are a variety of reasons. Colour CCDs don't have the resolution that monochrome ones do. Cost, which relates back to the resolution. Sensitivity to light: monochrome CCDs can be, and often are, optimized for very low light.
With filters it is possible to zoom in on any spectral line you wish, like the red hydrogen alpha line, or the blue-green oxygen line (produced by emission nebulae, which is why the Orion Nebula looks greenish-grey).
...laura
eh (Score:2)
With very dim objects (like most astronomical phenomenon), you tend to get a narrow range of light from them. Thus, you use your color filters to capture it and eliminate the other stray wavelengths. This maximizes amount of light gathered.
Then you can go back and combine the separate images into one 'full color' image, if thats what you want.
A good site using a Meade and a *Colour* Quickcam (Score:3, Informative)
He's got plenty of information on setting up and processing images including shooting dim objects with the Meade and stacking multiple exposures for better clarity.
Some of his deep sky objects are awesome. I particularly like M57.
(Telescope) Gear for nerds ! (Score:2, Informative)
Here is some good stating points.
www.cloudynights.com , great reviews
www.scopereviews.com , also a good review site
also start a subscription to a magazine , I would recomend sky & telescope
www.skypub.com
and visit a local club before you buy.
Re:what the hell's the big deal? (Score:2)
People who find this subject intriguing should check out AstroStack [astrostack.com].
Re:what the hell's the big deal? (Score:1)
But picture of faint Deep sky object is some thing that was near impossible 2 years ago without a very expensive astro-CCD camera.
But now with the work of Steve Chambers
(http://home.clara.net/smunch/wintro.ht
with a cheap Webcam
linux code (Score:2)
-russ
Re:linux code (Score:1)
http://3demi.net/astro/qastrocam/doc/
and sample images are avaible here
http://3demi.net/photos/astro/
This program can handle the Webcam with the hardware mod that allow long exposure snapshot.
Earth Approaching Asteroids (Score:1)
Re:Earth Approaching Asteroids (Score:1)
Some more pics (Score:2, Informative)
It only has a CMOS chip (not as photosensitive as the Quickcam CCD) but seems to work ok.
http://www.datawhorehouse.com/astro/ [datawhorehouse.com]
The lunar pic [datawhorehouse.com] is pretty.
There are plenty more astro photo's on the yahoo digital astro group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/digital_astro/
The Sky at Night... (Score:2)
In all the discussions about the lack of cost, and the detail on the final photos, ease of use, etc., nobody actually bothered to mention that....
You'd also need a telescope.
Telescope not absolutly needed (Score:1)
you don't need absolutly a telescope.
By using Lens of a regular SLR film-camera
you can some nice pictures of deep sky objects
(the CCD captor is so small than it "multiply"
by 10 the focal of your lens (if you compare with the size of a regular 24x36 film)
Is it astrophotography? (Score:2)
Is is astrophotography if you don't do photography - silver halide on plastic/glass?
This is _astroimaging_.
Just a nit, but it is good to use the right terms, especially if you are a geek and want to sound geekish.