by NoelC » Wed Apr 18, 2007 3:19 pm
I see a single dark pixel or two. I'd say it's an imager defect or a glitch in the data.
A way you can tell is this: Actual objects in the image will all have about the same level of focus or fuzziness. This dark pixel is alone and not fuzzy like all the stars.
Also, the stars cannot be seen as disks or balls by any telescope we have on Earth. The fact that they're showing up in an image as more than one pixel in size is an imaging or possibly atmospheric artifact. At this distance they're all point light sources, so you would not be able to see anything in front of one of them.
While bright star images may bloom during exposure due to twinkling, optics, or even the characteristics of the imager itself, atrophotographers often also allow the sizes of brighter stars to grow even larger during image processing, so as to represent them as brighter within the severe limitations of our display and print technology. We have no display that's capable of representing the extreme dynamic brightness differences of astronomical objects directly, so we use tricks like increasing star size to help represent reality within the limitations of the medium.
-Noel
I see a single dark pixel or two. I'd say it's an imager defect or a glitch in the data.
[img]http://www.ourdarkskies.com/gallery2/d/1060-1/M3_Glitch.jpg[/img]
A way you can tell is this: Actual objects in the image will all have about the same level of focus or fuzziness. This dark pixel is alone and not fuzzy like all the stars.
Also, the stars cannot be seen as disks or balls by any telescope we have on Earth. The fact that they're showing up in an image as more than one pixel in size is an imaging or possibly atmospheric artifact. At this distance they're all point light sources, so you would not be able to see anything in front of one of them.
While bright star images may bloom during exposure due to twinkling, optics, or even the characteristics of the imager itself, atrophotographers often also allow the sizes of brighter stars to grow even larger during image processing, so as to represent them as brighter within the severe limitations of our display and print technology. We have no display that's capable of representing the extreme dynamic brightness differences of astronomical objects directly, so we use tricks like increasing star size to help represent reality within the limitations of the medium.
-Noel