Wednesday 23 December 2009

Advances in colour Mintron deep-sky imaging

The Shape of things to come.

I am working on a new colour Mintron camera with Mintron Enterprise Co., Ltd. and have some preliminary results to show. This is the 72S85H-EX-SW-OMEGA colour 1/2" chip, deep-sky Super Wide field, low amp-glow Mintron frame-accumulating video camera..
I have tested this experimental camera with a variety of telescopes and present some results here:

M42/3 with an f/5 130mm Celestron Nextstar SLT Newtonian.



M42/3 with an f/5 Kson 80mm apochromatic refractor

In both cases the image was made by combining three images: one exposed for the outer, fainter nebulosity (256 frame accumulation), a second exposed to an intermediate level (64 frame accumulation) for the nebulosity immediately surrounding the central, trapezium area, and a third exposed for the central, bright, trapezium part of the nebula (8 frames accumulation).

M43 with an f/4.8 10" newtonian



The Flame nebula in Orion with an f/4.8 10" Newtonian



The Running Man nebula in Orion with an f/4.8 10" Newtonian


The blue reflection nebula has shown up quite well in the final image.


M1 The Crab nebula with a 10" f/4.8 Newtonian and a 0.5 focal reducer




M13 with a 10" f/4.8 Newtonian and a 0.5 focal reducer





M57 with a 10" f/4.8 Newtonian and a 0.5 focal reducer



M27 with a 10" f/4.8 Newtonian and a o.5 focal reducer




Telescope Planet Mintrons

Remember that a monochrome camera is always going to be much more sensitive than a colour camera.
To obtain satisfactory colour images you must have a fast scope, and the bigger the aperture the better.



Dont forget to click on 'Older Posts' or 'Newer posts' below or browse the 'blog archive' on the left, or click on 2009 to see all of the posts for this year on one page.