
Saturn photo
- weixing
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Hi,
Have a nice day.
The Saturn image is not in B/W, it is in colour. I think the colour is depend on the type of instrument used to capture the image and the method that used to proccess the image.BTW, just asking, why usually the picture is B/W and not colour?
Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing
"The universe is composed mainly of hydrogen and ignorance." 


- weixing
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Hi,
Remember, not too long ago, people use totally manual tracking... not even RA motor drive to take astrophoto.
As long as you got a camera, you can take astro photo.
Have a nice day.
That's consider proper equipment... I thought you are going to say without a camera... ha ha ha =P =P =P Only thing is how much manual work and time are you willing to put in???Like just a camera and a telescope.
Remember, not too long ago, people use totally manual tracking... not even RA motor drive to take astrophoto.
As long as you got a camera, you can take astro photo.
Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing
"The universe is composed mainly of hydrogen and ignorance." 


- starfinder
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Hi Aryanto,
Well, my photo of Saturn was taken in colour, with no tinkering of the colour in post-processing, either hue or saturation. Maybe I should increase the saturation just a bit. As an aside, i had made 10 other recordings of Saturn that night, and this was the best. I had quite a bit of problems with white balance and hue with the others. Another aside: it's vital to sharpen the image after the stacking, as it makes a world (planet) of a difference.
As for its real colours, here is a natural colour photo of Saturn taken last year by NASA/JPL's Cassini orbiter.
The caption says: "Saturn and its rings completely fill the field of view of Cassini's narrow angle camera in this natural color image taken on March 27, 2004"
Read more about this image here:
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA05389
From what I see, whilst Saturn has a light cream-yellow-pink cast, its rings are just white and grey, with a hint of brown.
The strange thing is, Saturn looks very deep yellow both to the naked eye from Earth, and in my telescope eyepiece (rings included). I wonder why that is so. Anyone got the answer? Is it the concentration of light?
Well, my photo of Saturn was taken in colour, with no tinkering of the colour in post-processing, either hue or saturation. Maybe I should increase the saturation just a bit. As an aside, i had made 10 other recordings of Saturn that night, and this was the best. I had quite a bit of problems with white balance and hue with the others. Another aside: it's vital to sharpen the image after the stacking, as it makes a world (planet) of a difference.
As for its real colours, here is a natural colour photo of Saturn taken last year by NASA/JPL's Cassini orbiter.
The caption says: "Saturn and its rings completely fill the field of view of Cassini's narrow angle camera in this natural color image taken on March 27, 2004"
Read more about this image here:
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA05389
From what I see, whilst Saturn has a light cream-yellow-pink cast, its rings are just white and grey, with a hint of brown.
The strange thing is, Saturn looks very deep yellow both to the naked eye from Earth, and in my telescope eyepiece (rings included). I wonder why that is so. Anyone got the answer? Is it the concentration of light?
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- starfinder
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Hey, I've just done something:
Look at the Cassini photo above (bottom of page 1 of this thread), up close to the monitor, and put your hands around your eyes to block off everything else.
Then,
(1) Imagine you are looking at Saturn through a 100 inch Astro-Physics APO-flourite triplet costing $10 million, with perfect seeing conditions. Fantastic! What more could you ask for?
And
(2) Imagine you are in the Cassini orbiter looking out of a window at Saturn with your naked eyes. Awesome!!
I think Saturn is one of the most beautiful objects in all of nature, whether on Earth or in space. The more I look at it, the more splendid and surreal it seems. Breathtaking....
Look at the Cassini photo above (bottom of page 1 of this thread), up close to the monitor, and put your hands around your eyes to block off everything else.
Then,
(1) Imagine you are looking at Saturn through a 100 inch Astro-Physics APO-flourite triplet costing $10 million, with perfect seeing conditions. Fantastic! What more could you ask for?
And
(2) Imagine you are in the Cassini orbiter looking out of a window at Saturn with your naked eyes. Awesome!!
I think Saturn is one of the most beautiful objects in all of nature, whether on Earth or in space. The more I look at it, the more splendid and surreal it seems. Breathtaking....
- Airconvent
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Hi Gavin
Have to agree Saturn is one of the most beautiful objects around, and especially very nice to first timers.
The first time I saw Jupiter through Remus' FC60 @ 300x was great ! But several days later, I was rushing to a wedding dinner , saw a strange dot, suspected it was Saturn, went back to get y ex-ETX90 and wow! Saw Saturn for the very first time on my scope (or any scope for that matter) and is simply breath taking...
btw, do check out the latest info on the rings of Saturn revealed...
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/0 ... onday.html
Have to agree Saturn is one of the most beautiful objects around, and especially very nice to first timers.
The first time I saw Jupiter through Remus' FC60 @ 300x was great ! But several days later, I was rushing to a wedding dinner , saw a strange dot, suspected it was Saturn, went back to get y ex-ETX90 and wow! Saw Saturn for the very first time on my scope (or any scope for that matter) and is simply breath taking...
btw, do check out the latest info on the rings of Saturn revealed...
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/0 ... onday.html
The Boldly Go Where No Meade Has Gone Before
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
- weixing
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Hi,
Have a nice day.
From my previous observation, I think the Saturn seem to look whiter in Newtonian than in SCT... I still didn't had the chance to view Saturn through my refractor at high magnification, but it seem that it is also more yellowish than in Newtonian in medium magnification... may be is the lens in SCT and Refractor??The strange thing is, Saturn looks very deep yellow both to the naked eye from Earth, and in my telescope eyepiece (rings included). I wonder why that is so. Anyone got the answer? Is it the concentration of light?
With that, I think you can see the Spoke on the Saturn Ring... Hmm.. just wondering how Stephen James O'Meara can see the Spoke on the Ring with only a 15" and a 9" refractor?? :k-?: :k-?:Imagine you are looking at Saturn through a 100 inch Astro-Physics APO-flourite triplet costing $10 million, with perfect seeing conditions. Fantastic! What more could you ask for?
Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing
"The universe is composed mainly of hydrogen and ignorance." 


If you haven't seen it before, there are some really large pictures of Saturn out there. Check out:
http://imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/2004 ... ll_jpg.jpg
and
http://www.planetary.org/saturn/images_saturn.html
Full res (8888x4544, 1.5MB)!
http://imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/2004 ... ll_jpg.jpg
and
http://www.planetary.org/saturn/images_saturn.html
Full res (8888x4544, 1.5MB)!
- qu1xs1lv3r
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