Рет қаралды 308
The idea has been around for a long time and my first attempts date back years. But even today, the technology is not really ready to show deep sky objects in good quality as a time lapse. There is a reason that for single images, sometimes several hours of recordings with tracking are complexly processed with special dark, flat and bias frames.For time-lapse, we have to get by with a single image. With smaller objects and therefore a long focal length, we also have very little time for the individual exposures because of the earth's rotation. Roughly 500 divided by the focal length for full format, i.e. at 300 mm for the Orion Nebula or the Andromeda Galaxy less than 2 seconds. The objects are just visible to the naked eye even in very dark skies, so you need very fast lenses, high ISO values and a few "tricks" when shooting and processing. Some thoughts on this (in German) on my blog at timelapsevideo.euAll sequences are edited with LRTimelapse - the gold standard in time-lapse: lrtimelapse.com/?ap_id=timelapse (affiliate link)
More to come - stay tuned :-)
Music by JoshWoodward: LetItIn