Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Ursa Major (UMa)  ·  Contains:  M 101  ·  NGC 5447  ·  NGC 5449  ·  NGC 5450  ·  NGC 5451  ·  NGC 5453  ·  NGC 5455  ·  NGC 5457  ·  NGC 5461  ·  NGC 5462  ·  NGC 5471  ·  NGC 5477  ·  Pinwheel galaxy
M101 - The Pinwheel Galaxy in LRGB:  Things don't always work out!, Cosgrove's Cosmos (Patrick Cosgrove)
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M101 - The Pinwheel Galaxy in LRGB: Things don't always work out!

M101 - The Pinwheel Galaxy in LRGB:  Things don't always work out!, Cosgrove's Cosmos (Patrick Cosgrove)
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M101 - The Pinwheel Galaxy in LRGB: Things don't always work out!

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

I first shot the Pinwheel Galaxy last year using my One-Shot-Color Camera. I wanted to try it again and see what I could get using a mono camera and L,R,G,B & Ha filters with a longer set of exposures.

So I recently imaged this target over the span of 5 nights, starting on May13. I collected the normal LRGB filter data and I also collected some narrowband images through my Hydrogen-Alpha Filter. The equipment is pretty automated now so I could get things running and then try to sleep on the sofa - still keeping a general eye on things during the night.

At the same time I was capturing this image, I was also capturing the data for the M63 image I shared in the past few days. So I have not had a chance to go through the data set for this image until yesterday. I really had high hopes for this image - but what you don't always get what you hope for! I considered not even posting this image - but this is a journey and like any other trip - you have good days and you have bad days. I decided to show he bad with the good.

As part of the normal processing of astro image, you take the time to look over all of the image data with software that acts like a blink comparator. Each image should look pretty much the same as others in a sequence, unless a plane goes through the frame or a wondering cloud comes through, or something else goes wrong. The first thing I found was that I had many thin wandering clouds messing up a substantial number of frames that I had collected. These had to be culled. I lost over 5 hours of data and most of my Ha filter data due to this! Ouch.

Then I processed the data - doing calibrations and alignments and stacking operations. This takes hours and hours for my 12 core/24 thread Ryzen CPU to work through - at the end you can't wait to look at the resulting image masters! Then you can see what you actually got. And when I looked I found something called "Pattern Noise". You never want to see this - but - oh yes - I had it in this image. It looks like diagonal smears of rainbow colors….and this is VERY Hard to fix after the fact. What causes this? The most common causes are flexure of the telescope mount (something loosen up?) or Failure to dither exposures. Dithering is a process were the scope change its position slightly for every exposure. This moves the image around on the sensor a tiny bit and the stacking software lines everything back up in the end. This eliminates many sources of noise including pattern noise. It is possible that something in the setup failed during this exercise - thus causing the problem? I'm still not sure what happened here.

So now I have image artifacts and a LOT less data that I planned. OKAY…

Long story, short…. I used every processing trick in the book to salvage the data and the result is attached to this posting. It's….. OK - but to me it’s a disappointing failure. At best it is a lackluster example of the Art (unlike my last image - that one came out *great*). Some have said that still came out alright, but all I see are the problems…

But here it is for your perusal. …..

A little about M101- from Wikipedia:

The Pinwheel Galaxy (also known as Messier 101, M101 or NGC 5457) is a face-on spiral galaxy 21 million light-years (6.4 megaparsecs)[3] away from Earth in the constellation Ursa Major. It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781[a] and was communicated that year to Charles Messier, who verified its position for inclusion in the Messier Catalogue as one of its final entries.

On February 28, 2006, NASA and the European Space Agency released a very detailed image of the Pinwheel Galaxy, which was the largest and most-detailed image of a galaxy by Hubble Space Telescope at the time.[8] The image was composed of 51 individual exposures, plus some extra ground-based photos.

On August 24, 2011, a Type Ia supernova, SN 2011fe, was discovered in M101[9].

Thanks for looking!

Pat

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Here are the details for this image:

*Number of frames is after bad or questionable frames were culled (an many were regrettable removed):

76 x 120 seconds, bin 1x1 @ -15C, unity gain, ZWO Gen II L Filter

100 x 120 seconds, bin 1x1 @ -15C,unity gain, ZWO Gen II R Filter

96 x 120 seconds, bin 1x1 @ -15C, unity gain, ZWO Gen II G Filter

78 x 120 seconds, bin 1x1 @ -15C, unity gain, ZWO Gen II B Filter

Total of 11.6 hours

100 Dark exposures

45 Flat Darks

40 L Flats

40 R Flats

40 G Flats

40 B Flats

Capture Hardware:

Scope: Astrophysics 130mm Starfire F/8.35 APO refractor

Guide Scope: Televue 76mm Doublet

Camera: ZWO ASI1600mm-pro with ZWO Filter wheel with ZWO LRGB filter set,

and Astronomiks 6nm Narrowband filter set

Guide Camera: ZWO ASI290Mini

Focus Motor: Pegasus Astro Focus Cube 2

Camera Rotator: Pegasus Astro Falcon

Mount: Ioptron CEM60

Polar Alignment: Ipolar camera

Software:

Capture Software: PHD2 Guider, Sequence Generator Pro controller

Image Processing: Pixinsight, Photoshop - assisted by Coffee, extensive processing indecision and second guessing, editor regret and much swearing….. Given the problems on this image, more than the usual whining….

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M101 - The Pinwheel Galaxy in LRGB:  Things don't always work out!, Cosgrove's Cosmos (Patrick Cosgrove)