redstone said:Can anyone advise the settings for star photography?
My attempt with 15s, f2.8 and ISO 400 was not good.
Francis247 said:Hi redstone,
Maybe you can try to post your attempt picture so that others can better advice you.![]()
redstone said:Ok, will post later. Got tons of my photos from Bintan to edit. :bsmilie:
What colour does noise appear? Reddish?:think:
Francis247 said::think:
Possible. What White Balance did you use?
redstone said:Auto.
Shot by placing camera on beach (no tripod).
Usually, the stars will drift even it is taken at 1 min apart. What is the focal length of your lens? And which part of the sky you aim at (overhead, north or south)?? The higher you aim above northern or southern horizon, the exposure time you can use become shorter before stars trail start to appear.redstone said:Pardon my ignorance, but I noticed over half of the 'stars' in my shot moved in 2 pictures taken around a minute apart??? :dunno:
weixing said:Hi,
Usually, the stars will drift even it is taken at 1 min apart. What is the focal length of your lens? And which part of the sky you aim at (overhead, north or south)?? The higher you aim above northern or southern horizon, the exposure time you can use become shorter before stars trail start to appear.
Have a nice day.
redstone said:Pardon my ignorance, but I noticed over half of the 'stars' in my shot moved in 2 pictures taken around a minute apart??? :dunno:
paradigm said:actually, given abt 30 sec exposure, u would see that the star is no longer a "point" but becomes a small trail ...
so if you want point-stars shots, either u get a german equatorial mount or u push up the ISO so that you expose as short as possible ...
Noise don't have trail...redstone said:I used 30s exposure. No wonder some stars appeared blurry or as a small trail. Thanks for the explanation.![]()
My cam has high noise at ISO 400. Also max ISO. When I view in full size, there's a lot of noise. Can be confused wih real stars.
Coma is an off-axis aberration that make stars look like tear drops rather than a round spots... it look like star trail, but it is not. Most camera lens will have them if image star at wide open... even those very expensive Lens.redstone said:Pardon me what's a coma?
What will noise in the case of star photography appear as? Faint reddish splotches when viewed in full size?
Simple. Stars are white. Noise is red or green and everything else.redstone said:Thanks for the explanation
How do you distinguish between noise and real stars?
Usually, star are not a dot... even you use very sharp lens and got perfect focus. Stars will usually appear as a round spot, but noise will appear as very sharp dot usually make up of one or two pixels and most of the time, noise are smaller than stars.Thanks for the explanation
How do you distinguish between noise and real stars?