Horsehead Nebula Exposure Time Comparison

I am working on figuring out how much exposure time I need for astrophotography.  The answer from my Bortle 7-8 driveway is generally: More.  

Here I’ve got three example to show how adding time adds detail to the images.  In one minute, with a lot of processing, I can get the flame nebula to be barely visible, but the horsehead nebula … might be there, maybe, if you squint and know where to look.  With 155 minutes … like magic … you can see both, but they’re grainy.  Going up to 334 minutes, and the image is getting less grainy.  But more time is still needed to get a really nice picture.

Camera geek info:

  • Canon EOS 60D in manual mode, ISO 400, 1 minute exposure
  • Williams Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • Williams Optics Flat 73A
  • SkyTech 2” LPRO-MAX CCD Filter
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Friendswood, Texas Bortle 7-8 suburban skies

Frames:

  • March 3, 2023
    • 155 1 minute lights
    • 20 0.2 second flats
    • 20 0.2 second flat darks
    • 28 1 minute darks
  • March 4, 2023
    • 179 1 minute lights
    • 21 0.5 second flats
    • 21 0.5 second flat darks
    • 26 1 minute darks

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • StarXterminator
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch

M101 Supernova in Haiku

Cloudless skies last night.
Supernova shining bright.
A delightful sight.

Antha Ann Adkins

Thursday night we had clear skies (though a near-full Moon) and I was able to take another set of M101 and supernova images.  Comparing to my previous images, you can see that more time from my driveway gave me more galaxy details, but that they don’t compare to what I can get from darker skies.

Camera geek info:

  • Canon EOS 60D in manual mode, ISO 800, 1 minute exposures
  • Williams Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • Williams Optics Flat 73A
  • SkyTech 2” LPRO-MAX CCD Filter
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Friendswood, Texas Bortle 7-8 suburban skies

Frames:

  • 318 1 minute lights
  • 31 0.05 second flats
  • 20 0.05 second flat darks
  • 49 1 minute darks

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch