Troubleshooting some flats issues on my EdgeHD 11 I noticed that I get a weird ring like structure on the raw flat.
So I compared with flats from my Skywatcher 203pds, which show no ring like structure.
Is there a problem with my Edge image train - or do SCT flats look different in general?
SCT: EdgeHD 11 flat 30ms, 100gain, luminance
Newton: Skywatcher flat 30ms, 100gain, UVIR cut
equipment - Asi2600 cooled cam at -10C - AsiAir plus auto preview of flat
Arny
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Yes, it is kinda weird. Is it a sky flat or something else? Although you might get this weird results if there is condensation on the sensor (and thus this is good a reason NOT to switch on the cooler!).
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andrea tasselli: Yes, it is kinda weird. Is it a sky flat or something else? Although you might get this weird results if there is condensation on the sensor (and thus this is good a reason NOT to switch on the cooler!).
I get it on sky and LED flats equally. Just checked the camera and filters last week to remove mots and spots, but had the effect before and after cleaning on the Edge.
Calibrating with flats does eliminate parts of the effect, but some gradients remain.
Do you know if this could be specific to SCT's? Could it happen if the camera is not at the perfect backfocus distance using an additional crayford focuser?
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Arny: I get it on sky and LED flats equally. Just checked the camera and filters last week to remove mots and spots, but had the effect before and after cleaning on the Edge.
Calibrating with flats does eliminate parts of the effect, but some gradients remain.
Do you know if this could be specific to SCT's? Could it happen if the camera is not at the perfect backfocus distance using an additional crayford focuser?
Typical of SCTs no. And I haven't seen anything like that except in conjunction with a light leak.
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Hi Arny,
That does look different from the flats I get with my Edge but I'd bet if you look at the actual pixel values between the ring and the center the difference in illumination is only a few percent. The most important thing is that the flats correct well. Your flats are very short. Any time I've had an issue with flats the most common solution has been to dim the panel, use more layers of printer paper or t-shirt to make the flats longer. I shoot for a minimum of 8 seconds for LRGB, SHO tends to be a bit more forgiving but I like at least 3 seconds.
Mike
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That is almost certainly stray light reflecting from the inside of one of your adapter tubes…or (unlikely) from the inside of the primary baffle tube. Does that ring “print through” into your calibrated frames? If so, that’s definitely a stray light effect.
John
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John Hayes: That is almost certainly stray light reflecting from the inside of one of your adapter tubes…or (unlikely) from the inside of the primary baffle tube. Does that ring “print through” into your calibrated frames? If so, that’s definitely a stray light effect.
John
Thanks John, very good to know its not normal SCT behavior. Now I just need to understand where the reflection might occur, as all image train components are antireflective: - Baader Steel Diamond focusser - ZWO EFW 7x2“ - ZWO L-OAG
Or could it be the ZWO RGBL and NB Filters itself, creating a halo around the center?
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Mike Hamende: Hi Arny,
That does look different from the flats I get with my Edge but I'd bet if you look at the actual pixel values between the ring and the center the difference in illumination is only a few percent. The most important thing is that the flats correct well. Your flats are very short. Any time I've had an issue with flats the most common solution has been to dim the panel, use more layers of printer paper or t-shirt to make the flats longer. I shoot for a minimum of 8 seconds for LRGB, SHO tends to be a bit more forgiving but I like at least 3 seconds.
Mike
Hi Mike,
I will try to see if substantially longer flats (seconds vs milliseconds) will help improve - great idea!
May I ask what kind of panel you use for your flats?
Arny
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Arny:
Mike Hamende: Hi Arny,
That does look different from the flats I get with my Edge but I'd bet if you look at the actual pixel values between the ring and the center the difference in illumination is only a few percent. The most important thing is that the flats correct well. Your flats are very short. Any time I've had an issue with flats the most common solution has been to dim the panel, use more layers of printer paper or t-shirt to make the flats longer. I shoot for a minimum of 8 seconds for LRGB, SHO tends to be a bit more forgiving but I like at least 3 seconds.
Mike
Hi Mike,
I will try to see if substantially longer flats (seconds vs milliseconds) will help improve - great idea?
May I ask what kind of panel you use for your flats?
Arny I'm currently using a flat panel I made from this project: https://github.com/jlecomte/ascom-flat-panel
Before that I used a simple LED tracing panel and simply added printer paper until I got the desired brightness.
Same results with both, the ascom panel is just a little easier and faster.
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Arny:
John Hayes: That is almost certainly stray light reflecting from the inside of one of your adapter tubes…or (unlikely) from the inside of the primary baffle tube. Does that ring “print through” into your calibrated frames? If so, that’s definitely a stray light effect.
John
Thanks John, very good to know its not normal SCT behavior. Now I just need to understand where the reflection might occur, as all image train components are antireflective: - Baader Steel Diamond focusser - ZWO EFW 7x2“ - ZWO L-OAG
Or could it be the ZWO RGBL and NB Filters itself, creating a halo around the center? Without looking at your system, I can't say where the reflection is coming from but the evidence is there. Most antireflection black paint isn't very black and sometimes the edges of lenses aren't blackened at all. When you are trying to achieve photon level sensitivity with your system, it doesn't take very much stray light to screw things up. My recommendation is to remove the camera, point the scope at a bright scene during the daytime and put your eye about where the sensor is to look backwards through the system. Sometimes it's possible to spot a bright edge or other source of the problem. Turning marks on anodized tubes can be particularly troublesome if they aren't painted a very flat black. Pay attention to the smallest things and do some experimenting. You should be able to find the problem.
John
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I’ll vote for too bright, and getting reflections back from the filter. Of course I’m just guessing though. That shape looks like the corrector plate.
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While I can't say much for your SCT flat, though I might agree theres a light leak issue, maybe dew.... I find your Newt flat rather concerning as well. Is your focuser protuding inside the tube causing the sharp light falloff on that corner?
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Mike Hamende: Hi Arny,
That does look different from the flats I get with my Edge but I'd bet if you look at the actual pixel values between the ring and the center the difference in illumination is only a few percent. The most important thing is that the flats correct well. Your flats are very short. Any time I've had an issue with flats the most common solution has been to dim the panel, use more layers of printer paper or t-shirt to make the flats longer. I shoot for a minimum of 8 seconds for LRGB, SHO tends to be a bit more forgiving but I like at least 3 seconds.
Mike
So I took some longer flats of approx. 1.6seconds - here is the absolute value across the masterflat from 30 flats in WBPP showing K values - dark corner 0.4082 - bright ring 0.4777 - darker center 0.4166
2Dplot with STF turned on
2D plot without STF
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Brian Puhl: Is your focuser protuding inside the tube causing the sharp light falloff on that corner?
Hi Brian,
the dark corner is an effect of the TS Optics OAG not fitting perpendicular onto the ZWO 5x2" filter wheel. Something I need to address, probablby by getting another ZWO OAG as the TS Optics suffers from poor quality (the prism dropped out once ...)
The potential light leaks on the Edge still puzzle me ...
Arny
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Sean Mc: I’ll vote for too bright, and getting reflections back from the filter. Of course I’m just guessing though. That shape looks like the corrector plate.
So you'd think dimming the panel and thus extending the exposure times would improve the flats?
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John Hayes: That is almost certainly stray light reflecting from the inside of one of your adapter tubes…or (unlikely) from the inside of the primary baffle tube. Does that ring “print through” into your calibrated frames? If so, that’s definitely a stray light effect.
John My guess would be light leaking in the gap between the focuser drawtube and the focuser itself. Try putting a blanket or something over the whole backside and see what happens.
If it's a light leak, increasing the panel brightness and decreasing exposure time will make any light leak from ambient light dimmer.
Worth putting the scope in a dark room and hit different spots with a flashlight while looping exposures.
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That appears to be a light leak. I've had a similar issue on my Edge HD 8 caused by my flat panel having a gap or hole inbetween it and the tube. Also had this from my light source not being positioned correctly. I now like to use my phone flashlight at the end of the dew-shield, positioned directly in the center, works the charm every time.
Heres what an Edge HD flat should look like (Ignore the color, it's NIR, and ignore the OAG shadow and corner Vignette; the 8 is not optimized for Full-Frame.)
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Damn, that’s better than I thought from full frame.
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John Hayes:
Arny:
John Hayes: That is almost certainly stray light reflecting from the inside of one of your adapter tubes…or (unlikely) from the inside of the primary baffle tube. Does that ring “print through” into your calibrated frames? If so, that’s definitely a stray light effect.
John
Thanks John, very good to know its not normal SCT behavior. Now I just need to understand where the reflection might occur, as all image train components are antireflective: - Baader Steel Diamond focusser - ZWO EFW 7x2“ - ZWO L-OAG
Or could it be the ZWO RGBL and NB Filters itself, creating a halo around the center? Without looking at your system, I can't say where the reflection is coming from but the evidence is there. Most antireflection black paint isn't very black and sometimes the edges of lenses aren't blackened at all. When you are trying to achieve photon level sensitivity with your system, it doesn't take very much stray light to screw things up. My recommendation is to remove the camera, point the scope at a bright scene during the daytime and put your eye about where the sensor is to look backwards through the system. Sometimes it's possible to spot a bright edge or other source of the problem. Turning marks on anodized tubes can be particularly troublesome if they aren't painted a very flat black. Pay attention to the smallest things and do some experimenting. You should be able to find the problem.
John
1. This is an image taken into the tube from the camera end through the Baader Focuser with the scope pointing at the sky - showing a lot more reflection than expected, but on camera a lot more than what the bare eye would see. I wonder if that is different from other EdgeHD‘s …?
2. and here taken with a flashlight to Illuminate the baffles of scope and baader focuser - does not look like parts of the blackening dropped off …
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