by MarkBour » Mon Oct 14, 2019 7:17 pm
keesscherer wrote: ↑Mon Oct 14, 2019 7:38 am
The 223 Luminance images with 300 second exposure where made between 12 nov 2018 and 4 oct 2019. I make around 12 images per night when there is no Moon above the horizon and M31 is at least at 30 degrees altitude. For each night i make a stack and use that stack to do a blink comparison with a reference stack to find novae in M31. And so after a while you end up with a lot of subs and every now and then i make a stack with all the collected subs. To find Asteroids i also make stacks without "sigma clipping". The Asteroid will show up as a short line, there is 1 in the middle top in this image, just below the letter "c" of "October". It is Asteroid 334168 ST119 imaged on 4 october 2019 (6.3km diameter, magnitude 20.8). The image featured here showed a nice airplane/ Satellite trail frame around M31.
I really like this APOD! Shows a little of what's involved. And it's especially nice that Kees is answering questions here. Thanks for explaining and pointing out that asteroid line. If you go further to the right, still very near the top of the image, there is another, longer, line segment, but it bulges in the middle and both tails are fine points. I'm guessing that was a meteor, is that right?
[quote=keesscherer post_id=296146 time=1571038737 user_id=144076]
The 223 Luminance images with 300 second exposure where made between 12 nov 2018 and 4 oct 2019. I make around 12 images per night when there is no Moon above the horizon and M31 is at least at 30 degrees altitude. For each night i make a stack and use that stack to do a blink comparison with a reference stack to find novae in M31. And so after a while you end up with a lot of subs and every now and then i make a stack with all the collected subs. To find Asteroids i also make stacks without "sigma clipping". The Asteroid will show up as a short line, there is 1 in the middle top in this image, just below the letter "c" of "October". It is Asteroid 334168 ST119 imaged on 4 october 2019 (6.3km diameter, magnitude 20.8). The image featured here showed a nice airplane/ Satellite trail frame around M31.
[/quote]
I really like this APOD! Shows a little of what's involved. And it's especially nice that Kees is answering questions here. Thanks for explaining and pointing out that asteroid line. If you go further to the right, still very near the top of the image, there is another, longer, line segment, but it bulges in the middle and both tails are fine points. I'm guessing that was a meteor, is that right?