You won’t get the flexibility of different focal lengths, different cameras, different filters etc that you get with a real astrophotography set up but also a lot less pain!

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Everyone we’re going on about filters - but I saw & experience tech that need no filters

It’s not all integrated INFRARED

Now, that’s my jam!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

*I saw & experienced tech

*it’s all integrated INFRARED

A lot of people will use dual narrowband filters (passing just Hydrogen alpha and Oxygen III) in light polluted cities to get a decent image. Or if you are imaging with a monochrome camera then filters are essential so you can build a colour image at the end.

Más intersanté

& very very true…

I had trouble capturing the Northern Lights on my own, so this is all foreign to me.

I run data sets on massive telescopes & overall estimate where exactly my superiors & their monster telescopes should point to/focus on 😂 but I’m more of a conceptual Rocket Scientist - so this is all a learning lesson for me. Lol.

Meaning, from my abstract mind,

Filters are so important! Lol

Until infrared…IMO 😂

How would one do astrophotography with a telescope and well-known DSLR camera brand like Nikon or Canon?

Lens. Lens. Lens!

It’s possible! I’ve done it!!!!

Like, a lens with a special adapter or something? Maybe just duct tape the camera to the telescope? 😂

#[3]​ will tell you the setup.

I will tell you where to point.

(Sorry for showing you off #[3]​ 😂🤣) I’m so proud of your work!!!!!!

Once you have the right setup, the software does all the pointing for you!

Honestly, I can respond more soon but being able to film, & take multiple images over the span of hours with a low shutter speed is the key.

Then you blend all the images to formulate an entire image… that’s usually how it’s done for beginners at this, I have found.

You can use a DSLR and a standard lens as a starting point but there is a very deep astrophotography rabbit hold to fall down! This video on YouTube was one of them that got me started on this:

https://youtu.be/iuMZG-SyDCU

I will be trying this 🌌

FYI — #[3]​ is the astrophotography expert of Nostr.

I am just here to assist.

You need a time & location with clear skies as well - it’s called “full visibility”

You’d be surprised how far your normals lens can go & how much of the distortion you can manipulate

Hence, why I believe our images of space are mostly skewed as evidence because it’s all very heavily treated photographs

Fight me over this too 🫡👊🏽💥

If you look at the images of an object on Astrobin you find that the colours in particular are all different. It’s somewhat of an “artistic” decision in the processing as to how the final result looks.

Especially when using narrowband filters and the mapping colours to them like the Hubble images.