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Introduction to Astrophotography. Blythe Guvenen Kitt Peak Visitor Center. Astrophotography.
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Introduction to Astrophotography Blythe Guvenen Kitt Peak Visitor Center
Astrophotography • Astrophotography is a specialized type of photography that involves making photographs of astronomical objects in the night sky such as planets, stars, and deep sky objects such as star clusters and galaxies.
Astrophotography • Astrophotography is used to reveal objects that are too faint to observe with the naked eye. • Digital cameras • Can accumulate and sum photons over long periods of time. • Astrophotography poses challenges that are distinct from normal photography. • Subjects are usually quite faint, and are often small in angular size.
Daguerreotype • First photographic plate, thin film of polished silver on a copper base. • Invented by Louis Daguerre in 1838
Early Astrophotography!First Lunar Daguerreotype 1840 - John Draper(20 minute exposure!)
Early Astrophotography!Henry Draper • First to photograph the Orion Nebula; September 30th, 1880 • 50 minute exposure!
The Human Eye • No permanent record of images. • No way to change exposure time. • No good way to measure quantitatively.
To film or not to film? • Pros: • Well-established • Archival quality (black and white) • Cons: • Finicky to temperature, humidity, processing conditions • Fragile; brittle • Low efficiency: 1-10% • Non-linear (reciprocity failure) • Difficult to get quantitative information • Nearly extinct!
Charge Coupled Device (CCD) • Semi-conductor based solid state detectors • Incoming photons generate electrons that are added up to form an image • Excellent quantum efficiency: 60-90+%! • Available for a wide range of wavelengths: • 300 - 1100 nm (Si) • 1 - 5 µm (InSb) • 1 - 25 µm (HgCdTe)
Astrophotography Using a Camera • Good quality, wide-angle photographs of the night sky can be made by almost anyone using a single lens reflex digital cameras. • Should travel far away from the bright, light-polluted skies. • Prevent the photograph from being completely washed out and ruined by bright urban light pollution.
Fixed-Position Mounting • Equipment needed • Camera capable of long (>30 sec) exposures • Sturdy tripod • Techniques • Amount of trailing depends on exposure time and declination • Digital stacking • Time-lapse
Tracked Wide Angle Shots • Equipment • >30 second exposures • Tracking mount • Piggybacked camera w/ lens • Techniques • Digital stacking • Foreground will trail (unless you use a flash to freeze it)
Short Exposure Astrophotography • Use CCD with “Hyperstar” or modified webcam • Short exposures = less expensive mount • Align and stack • Exact polar alignment is less important • Larger periodic error is tolerable • Unguided
Long Exposure Astrophotography • Good mounting is critical • Exact polar alignment is necessary • Solid connections (rings, plates, etc.) • Must be guided • Manual or auto • Need reticle EP or autoguider
Long Exposure Astrophotography • Guiding • Piggyback • Need adjustable rings • Need larger mount • Differential flexure • Off axis guider • Can be hard to acquire guide star • Built in autoguider • Guides through filter less sensitivity
Astrophotography Using a Telescope • Afocal • “Prime” focus • Eyepiece projection • “Piggyback”
Afocal Photography • Simplest telescope coupling (unguided) - Skylight filter recommended (protect camera lens) • Difficult alignment and focussing • Variable results - lots of patience! • Good telescope method to start with - Digital cameras • Requires good quality eyepiece
“Prime” Focus • Camera directly coupled to telescope • Telescope objective acts as very long focus lens • Camera replaces telescope eyepiece • Focusing easier than afocal method • Telescope guiding desirable!
“Prime” Focus Cassegrain telescope Off-axis guider Focus on chip Detector Camera