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First of all I didn't realize it was going to transit the cloud, one of
my favorite visually. But that didn't matter as it was cloudy and severely moonlit up here. Finally last night the clouds cleared for a couple hours, cloudy again today. I managed 20 minutes of L and 10 of each for RGB. Then saw I had 20 minutes before it hit my Meridian Tree so took another 20 minutes but when I combined them pluto was elongated and the clouds moving in made the elongation dimmer so it looked weird. I didn't expect it to move enough in the 30 minutes of color data but it did. Down this low my transparency over the lake is horrid. I had one heck (way too mild of a word) with color balance but think it finally came out about right. 10 minutes just wasn't enough that low through all the gunk to fully adjust for blue extinction. Even green was weak judging by how much I had to reduce red to match. But after all the work I see Pluto came out somewhat orange which seems to match the super colorized Hubble images. Hope it is right. 14" LX200R @ f/19, L=1x20' RGB=1x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#2
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that's awesome Rick!
a demoted planet.,..... "Rick Johnson" wrote in message . com... First of all I didn't realize it was going to transit the cloud, one of my favorite visually. But that didn't matter as it was cloudy and severely moonlit up here. Finally last night the clouds cleared for a couple hours, cloudy again today. I managed 20 minutes of L and 10 of each for RGB. Then saw I had 20 minutes before it hit my Meridian Tree so took another 20 minutes but when I combined them pluto was elongated and the clouds moving in made the elongation dimmer so it looked weird. I didn't expect it to move enough in the 30 minutes of color data but it did. Down this low my transparency over the lake is horrid. I had one heck (way too mild of a word) with color balance but think it finally came out about right. 10 minutes just wasn't enough that low through all the gunk to fully adjust for blue extinction. Even green was weak judging by how much I had to reduce red to match. But after all the work I see Pluto came out somewhat orange which seems to match the super colorized Hubble images. Hope it is right. 14" LX200R @ f/19, L=1x20' RGB=1x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#3
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There is a 3D effect in your image -B92t really does look like a hole
in the star cloud and not a dark cloud in the foreground. On Thu, 08 Jul 2010 14:52:51 -0500, Rick Johnson wrote: First of all I didn't realize it was going to transit the cloud, one of my favorite visually. But that didn't matter as it was cloudy and severely moonlit up here. Finally last night the clouds cleared for a couple hours, cloudy again today. I managed 20 minutes of L and 10 of each for RGB. Then saw I had 20 minutes before it hit my Meridian Tree so took another 20 minutes but when I combined them pluto was elongated and the clouds moving in made the elongation dimmer so it looked weird. I didn't expect it to move enough in the 30 minutes of color data but it did. Down this low my transparency over the lake is horrid. I had one heck (way too mild of a word) with color balance but think it finally came out about right. 10 minutes just wasn't enough that low through all the gunk to fully adjust for blue extinction. Even green was weak judging by how much I had to reduce red to match. But after all the work I see Pluto came out somewhat orange which seems to match the super colorized Hubble images. Hope it is right. 14" LX200R @ f/19, L=1x20' RGB=1x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick |
#4
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Wow, Pluto can count itself lucky that it wasn't swallowed by the dark
nebula. Now that it is not a planet any more nobody would have come for rescue ;-) This is a great background for Pluto. Stefan "Rick Johnson" schrieb im Newsbeitrag . com... First of all I didn't realize it was going to transit the cloud, one of my favorite visually. But that didn't matter as it was cloudy and severely moonlit up here. Finally last night the clouds cleared for a couple hours, cloudy again today. I managed 20 minutes of L and 10 of each for RGB. Then saw I had 20 minutes before it hit my Meridian Tree so took another 20 minutes but when I combined them pluto was elongated and the clouds moving in made the elongation dimmer so it looked weird. I didn't expect it to move enough in the 30 minutes of color data but it did. Down this low my transparency over the lake is horrid. I had one heck (way too mild of a word) with color balance but think it finally came out about right. 10 minutes just wasn't enough that low through all the gunk to fully adjust for blue extinction. Even green was weak judging by how much I had to reduce red to match. But after all the work I see Pluto came out somewhat orange which seems to match the super colorized Hubble images. Hope it is right. 14" LX200R @ f/19, L=1x20' RGB=1x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
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