Roberto,Roberto Colombari wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 2:37 pm There remain few points that are really a little bit confusing at least for me.
You shot the Comet-Mars conjunction from sunset 'till 22:45, local time approximately.
At this time there's still a good amount of sky (Jupiter, Cetus, etc...) between them and the horizon where they'll set later one. Why can't we see them in the image?
Cheers
The author was fairly clear in their answer on this point:
The implicit part is that combining the sky with the foreground should represent the sky as it was when the comet/Mars were setting behind the mountains (= a few hours after the background sky images were taken). I wont blame the author for not spending the night at the Gornergrat, it is cold up there!!! . The problem is that the result is far from what the sky would have looked like (sure, it could have been worse if the picture had been taken from the North side of the Matterhorn for example...).What I did was to take the foreground exposure after sunset during the blue hour pointing the camera north west where, as planned with Stellarium, the comet would set early in the morning of the 11. Then, from the exact same tripod position, I tilted the camera up and framed the comet with mars (and part of the dark nebula). I then took a series of exposures until 30 minutes more or less after moonrise…
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Then I combined blended the sky with the foreground.
Again, when you read the answer from the author, they do stress that the pictures were taken "from the exact same tripod position". What is the point of stressing this, if not to make people believe that this composite represents something real? Based on all the issues that have been pointed out, why bother using a foreground image taken on the same night, or even from the same place?
Cheers,
jf