The moon is bright and the clouds are fast. So, I’ve been...



The moon is bright and the clouds are fast. So, I’ve been goofing around with hardware, updated NINA and plugins, getting ready for the next clear night. It’s raining right now. I was looking at some narrowband data for Sharpless 2-199 (Soul Nebula in Cassiopeia) I captured late last year and reprocessed the Ha data. I am especially fascinated by the differences in depth and darkness between the background and the bands of dust and interstellar gasses that twist in front of the Soul Nebula, between us and the high-energy emission of the towering clouds of hydrogen beyond. Someone commented (I think on AstroBin) on another image of mine with similar properties—that I needed to bring up the black point, that the night sky is black. But why? Who says so? The data says the background isn’t as dark as the dust, so why would I want to lose that difference?

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Published on June 17, 2022 13:28
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