by Chris Peterson » Mon Mar 04, 2013 7:12 pm
MargaritaMc wrote:About today's Apod he says,
Shot over 3 nights using the TMB92SS/QHY9M , this is a Hubble Palette (HST) version with SII filter assigned to Red, H-Alpha filter assigned to Green and OIII filter assigned to blue channel.
Total Exposure 14.5 hours
Image Information
Location: DownUnder Observatory, Fremont MI
Date of Shoot August 29th,30th and 31st 2012
Exposures:
QHY9M mono CCD
H-Alpha 3nm 11 x 30 min
OIII 8.5 nm 8 x 30 min
SII 8 nm 10 x 30 min
I'm getting to grips with astrophotography (theory, not practice...) and would be helped if some kind soul would clarify what the figures of nanometres mean in the above quote, in the description of the filters used.
The filters used are bandpass filters, meaning they allow a range of wavelengths through, excluding longer and shorter wavelengths. Bandpass filters are specified by two key values: the center wavelength, and the bandpass (the width of the filter). The narrower the filter, the less off-band light it passes.
Any H-alpha filter is centered on 656 nm. The filter used here was very narrow, only 3 nm wide, meaning it passes light from 654.5 nm to 657.5 nm. The OIII and SII filters are a little wider, being about ±4 nm around their center wavelengths. So, more specifically, the filters are:
H-a 656.28 ± 1.5 nm
OIII 500.7 ± 4.25 nm (or more likely, centered between the 500.7 nm and 495.9 nm doublet)
SII 671.7 ± 4 nm (or more likely, centered between the 671.7 nm and 673.1 nm doublet)
[quote="MargaritaMc"]About today's Apod he says,
[quote]Shot over 3 nights using the TMB92SS/QHY9M , this is a Hubble Palette (HST) version with SII filter assigned to Red, H-Alpha filter assigned to Green and OIII filter assigned to blue channel.
Total Exposure 14.5 hours
Image Information
Location: DownUnder Observatory, Fremont MI
Date of Shoot August 29th,30th and 31st 2012
Exposures:
QHY9M mono CCD
H-Alpha 3nm 11 x 30 min
OIII 8.5 nm 8 x 30 min
SII 8 nm 10 x 30 min [/quote]
I'm getting to grips with astrophotography (theory, not practice...) and would be helped if some kind soul would clarify what the figures of nanometres mean in the above quote, in the description of the filters used.[/quote]
The filters used are bandpass filters, meaning they allow a range of wavelengths through, excluding longer and shorter wavelengths. Bandpass filters are specified by two key values: the center wavelength, and the bandpass (the width of the filter). The narrower the filter, the less off-band light it passes.
Any H-alpha filter is centered on 656 nm. The filter used here was very narrow, only 3 nm wide, meaning it passes light from 654.5 nm to 657.5 nm. The OIII and SII filters are a little wider, being about ±4 nm around their center wavelengths. So, more specifically, the filters are:
H-a 656.28 ± 1.5 nm
OIII 500.7 ± 4.25 nm (or more likely, centered between the 500.7 nm and 495.9 nm doublet)
SII 671.7 ± 4 nm (or more likely, centered between the 671.7 nm and 673.1 nm doublet)