This is the clearest and best presented explanation of calibration frames I have seen. A lot of materials found on forums are just recipes (good and bad) presented either without reason or with faulty reasoning. Thank you SK.
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
@@Birko64 thank you for saying this! I agree so many people just tell you what to do without any context!
@Clint-pe8hi3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the well thought out explanation. I have watched many calibration videos over the past 4 yrs. But your teaching skills are much better than most. Clear skies
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Wow that’s such a nice thing to say, thank you! CS
@samboteague3 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation! I’ve heard this articulated before but your scale analogy is perfect
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Thank you! It took me forever to come up with something that is easy to grasp! 😁
@ShrikeZone3 ай бұрын
All I understood from that is I'm hungry for some black beans and rice. :)
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Don’t forget to measure your ingredients multiple times!
@ekalbkr2 ай бұрын
This is, I believe, the first video I have seen of yours. I like your rice and plate algorithm. You are clearly smart and thorough. I think I'll be watching more.
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
that's very nice of you to say, thanks for being here!
@hersann01183 ай бұрын
Great tutorial. Thanks for that. I'am among the lazy fraction of astrofotographers, who try to restrict the calibration work to the indispensable minimum, which really matters in the final picture. Flats are indeed indispensable, specifically for fast optics, the other depend on the camera and the ambition for the final picture. You have supplemented what I exercise after long experimental experience with solid scientific justifications.
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
I’m glad we’re in the same page ☺️ I can relate - I am all about optimizing! I’d never skip my flats though 😁 clear skies!
@lainevince3 ай бұрын
Is this correct? Darks already contain bias so if you use dark frames you do not need to subtract bias from the lights. Bias or dark flats are need for flats.
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
That’s right! You wouldn’t need both! Workflows that use both are aimed at optimizing dark frames i.e. scaling them in case they were not taken correctly
@JayJayYUP2 ай бұрын
What a crazy good explanation on these concepts, thank you!
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
@@JayJayYUP thank you so much! I’m so happy people appreciate the deep dive approach ☺️
@CosmicCaptures2 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. It is the best explanation of calibration frames I have seen on KZbin so far.
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
@@CosmicCaptures thank you so much I’m glad it’s helpful!
@21931913 ай бұрын
Excellent discussion of the needed exposure time for flat frames. I had the striping problem you described but didn't know the cause. Experimentation with neutral density filters between my light panel and telescope solved the problem by lengthening my exposure times. But until I saw your video, I didn't know why very short flat frame exposures were causing the problem. Well done!
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Thank you! I just put sheets of paper in between when I have to take flats with a fast scope! 😁
@Megawatt3 ай бұрын
Great job! You don’t just clobber us with knowledge, but back up and justify your views. Very clear explanation. One thing I would like to hear your opinion on is dark frame calibration with a DSLR or other non-cooled camera. Achieving a consistent temperature is obviously a challenge. How important is this, and what are the best practices for creating temperature-matched dark frames?
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for saying that! I use a dark library for my mirrorless camera and I try to take dark frames for each 5-degree increment. There is no perfect solution because the temperature is not controlled, but if it’s close enough it will provide a benefit over just nothing.
@robertfarrimond33693 ай бұрын
Some older ccd's require longer duration flats, or they record a shadow of the shutter. (KAF8300 sensors are a good example) What's really bad is when the "dust" moves over time during a session (mostly a DSLR problem). Flats just make it worse. I tried a round of low ISO flats, had to shoot a set of bias frames to calibrate the flats in PixInsight. I wasn't exploring it for long term use, just trying to clean up some borderline data. It did work but it's more cumbersome than it's worth. Better data is the solution (and sometimes a better camera).
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
oh no! Dust that moves around really sounds like the most horrible problem that you can't calibrate out. At that point you just hope it moves around enough to get rejected (kidding)
@jonmartin2624Ай бұрын
Is it necessary to be perfectly focused before taking flats? I've been running an autofocus beforehand, but would rather just skip that, and start the night directly with taking flats, and dark flats.
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
Focus is important but not crucial. If you didn’t actively defocus before, it will still work, don’t worry about it.
@srikanthmeg5 күн бұрын
I know about these concepts only because I have been doing it for a while. But, this is a very good information and clear explanation for anyone who is starting new
@tostativerdkАй бұрын
I really enjoy the depth you go into in your videos and don’t mind at all that they take 30 min :) Keep ‘em coming!
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
Thank you I’m glad you think so
@newonyoutube55352 ай бұрын
Greetings from India ! Many congratulations! 🎉.Your gear selection is simply amazing just like your knowledge on the subject and ability to explain the technicalities in simpler terms.
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much :) That's very kind
@sonofoneintheuniverse3 ай бұрын
Wonderful summary! 😊
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
thank you, I appreciate you saying that!
@woody5109Ай бұрын
Brilliant, unscripted, wow.
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
Thank you for saying that
@LyngJohn2053 ай бұрын
Thank you very much. I can take dark flats using NINA, but I don’t know how to identify them to pixinsight when I use WBPP.
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
You don’t need to. Dark flats are just darks and WBPP will automatically match the dark with the corresponding exposure length 😊
@LyngJohn2053 ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala thanks!
@RudraEditHub6662 ай бұрын
Please make a tutorial for mobile astrophotography..bytw. I'm a mobile astrophotographer now but i about buy a new telescope edisla astra 100 and i already captured milky way galaxy,orion constellation, scorpion, etc constellation, star trails,venus,moon, Jupiter, Sirius and lots of stars
@giuseppiallegro2 ай бұрын
Very well explained. Nice job!
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
@@giuseppiallegro thank you! 😊
@volvotl22Ай бұрын
With my 183mc pro to fully remove the amp glow (that can creep back in stretching), I rotate the camera 180 degrees half way through the session. If I take light flats (I don't), how would this work as I am changing the imaging train mid session?
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
If your darks are correct you should be able to calibrate them out perfectly without needing to do this rotation. A reason they may not work is for example if light creeps in while you’re taking darks. I noticed this with my 183MM Pro - light was leaking in somewhere. Now I do darks with the cap on, inside a box, under the bed in a dark room. It sound ridiculous but it works. I don’t see how rotating the camera would be beneficial - it flips by 180° anyway during the meridian flip. If you do decide to rotate the camera you’ll need to take flats in both orientations and calibrate each light with the correct flat.
@volvotl22Ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala If there is a meridian flip, then yes, rotation is unnecessary (that is how I discovered this trick). The amp glow is so bright on mine there is very little signal under it and artifacts keep creeping back in. I regularly use 300 or 450sec exposures and have at least 35 matching darks. I will follow your advice and increase this to 50+ next session.
@pedzsan2 ай бұрын
Could you put together a simple chart with the different types of frames on the left horizontal axis: darks, flats, bias, dark flats. And across the type such attributes as temperature and ISO (and perhaps others) and a check in the corresponding box if that attribute affects that type of frame. The goal here is to understand what is a "library" of calibration frames. To rephrase, does a library need to have a master bias frame for each ISO and temperature? Currently I'm sticking with ISO of 1600 but my camera is not cooled. This really is a nice video because it tells us *why* we are taking each type of frame.
@michael.a.covingtonАй бұрын
Accurate expositions of how astrophotography works are rare. Thank you for this!
@mikelockwood21043 ай бұрын
great video - thank you
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@Tanglebones.Ай бұрын
Excellent video, very many thanks.
@Mike321795Ай бұрын
I did a test with and with out darks and I don't see no difference
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
Which sensor?
@Mike321795Ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala idk it was my nikon dslr
@Lord_Volkner3 ай бұрын
I'm glad you started making these longer videos to explain things. How do you build up a library of master darks? Don't they have to be taken every time? I missed something, I think. I'll watch the video again. Also, if you every feel like making a video explaining proper ISO/gain settings for DSO imagining, I don't think I'd be the only person who would greatly appreciate that.
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Darks can be reused over and over! The only one that’s session specific is the flat. For the dark library you just take them for each temperature you want to shoot at - in case of a cooled camera. For a non-cooled camera you’ll still do the same but as you can’t control the temperature you try to take them at each 5-degree increment as the weather allows and then later use the one that is closest to the current temperature. I have been known to take darks in my fridge for the fall-winter 😁😁
@Lord_Volkner3 ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala Thank you.
@anata512718 күн бұрын
Calibration success rate depends on camera. For advanced cameras from such companies as FLI, QHY, etc. calibration works no matter how it has been done. On other hand, ASI294-created lights very tough to calibrate.
@the_space_koala18 күн бұрын
I have heard horrible stories about the calibration of the 294 sensor!
@frankm81m822 ай бұрын
Excellent video, your the first who actually said when you don’t use darks you still need to calibrate lights with the bias instead. One other fyi, you said calibration is really important for astrometry when measuring star brightness changes, I think you meant photometry, Astrometry measured position, photometry measures intensity, great presentation
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
hey Frank, thank you very much! and yes of course I meant photometry - I need to understand how to fix this in the video :D
@marvinwhisman333326 күн бұрын
I really liked your video. If I could offer a constructive comment I would suggest you try to eliminate some of the jump cuts. There are so many it makes watching the video very difficult over an extended period. That said, your content was very well presented.
@the_space_koala26 күн бұрын
thank you for the feedback - I have to get better at talking continuously without pauses :D
@marvinwhisman333326 күн бұрын
@@the_space_koala you are doing a good job. Your material is very accurate and well explained. Keep up the good work
@TL1000S973 ай бұрын
May be this smart Space Koala might convince me to take calibration frames 😊Up to now I have only taken calibration frames for my ASI294MC Pro. To get rid of the the amp glow this camera unfortunately suffer from. For other cameras, including mirrorless, I feel the quality usually are OK. The "lights" are more affected by atmospheric conditions to be "perfect" anyhow in my sessions up to now.
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
If you use your mirrorless with a lens you can also just take a series of calibration frames and reuse them! I for one don’t remove the lens of my mirrorless often so I can even reuse flats between sessions sometimes! And you can create a dark library for each like 5 degree increment in temperature and reuse those as well!
@TL1000S973 ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala Thanks a lot for your tip! I will follow your advice. I love "diversity" so I have a few cameras and lenses to work thru 😊
@drdentin321516 күн бұрын
I am curious how you take flats on your 14 in. are you forced to use the T Shirt method at twilight? Thanks Bill
@the_space_koala15 күн бұрын
the t-shirt works but I also have a gigantic self-built flat panel (made of a pre-cut EL sheet ordered online and an opaque acrylic disc in front)
@drdentin321515 күн бұрын
@@the_space_koala Thanks for the response. I would like to see plans / photos on how you did this, the light source you used. Thanks Bill
@the_space_koala13 күн бұрын
if you search for "EL Sheet" you can order pre-cut circles from Amazon or any Chinese website - you also have the option of ordering it already with the inverter attached which has a 12V input. For the acrylic I just custom ordered from a small Italian company called Plexishop. The important thing is order it more opaque than you think you'll need it - you can always expose your flats longer, you can't make them shorter if it's too bright :D
@EvenTheDogAgrees2 ай бұрын
Ooh, sounds like a fun little game. Let's see how close my understanding is prior to watching the video, and then see how far off I was afterwards. So, I think: * Darks: these serve to map the hot pixels of your camera, and potential thermal artefacts (e.g. a hot component close to the back of the sensor artificially illuminating some pixels). * Flats: these map things like dust specks on the lens and potentially cold pixels that don't react to incoming light. * Biases: this is the hardest one. I'd say thermal interference is probably one of the things it captures, but I have no clue why these should be required if you already have darks. Alright, onto the video! 😁
@EvenTheDogAgrees2 ай бұрын
* Darks: Alright, amp glow and dark current, forgot about those. 😅 * Flats: right, vignetting. Although, TBH, even with flats, I still get some vignetting after stacking in Siril using lights/darks/flats/biases. No clue why. * Biases: so, I was way off, it seems. * Dark Flats: never used them. The script in Siril that I use doesn't require them. The extra details w.r.t. mirror flip, rolling shutter, ... are good info. Never even considered those.
@the_space_koala2 ай бұрын
@@EvenTheDogAgrees haha I got the notification about your first comment immediately so I was interested in seeing what you think about the video :D Glad you found it useful
@EvenTheDogAgrees2 ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala Yeah, I'm actually interested in the math behind all these operations, especially in the context of astrophotography. Are there any decent resources you'd recommend?
@alexandreastronomy80223 ай бұрын
Very nice and detailed vidéo of calibration frames! I learned alot! Clear skyes from Québec, Canada!
@the_space_koala3 ай бұрын
Thanks for saying that I am happy it’s useful! And thanks for wishing clear skies, I could really use some 😭
@alexandreastronomy80223 ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala I understand, astrophotography is controlled by something we can’t change, meteo!
@santiagomadruga4298Ай бұрын
Well explained video with very clear animations, which take a good amount of effort.
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
thank you for acknowledging it, they really do because I don't know how to animate so I just make them in Keynote 😁
@santiagomadruga4298Ай бұрын
@@the_space_koala There's something unclear to me. The new mirrorless cameras, no old DSLR technology/sensors, like the new Sony cameras without star-eater problems (Sony A7rv, A7CII, A7Cr), should have basically no dark-current issues because they use cutting-edge sensors. Also they have very low noise, and cooling might not that critical. Aside emission nebula, these cameras in real life can perform as well as dedicated astro-cams for galaxies, clusters, and reflection nebula?
@the_space_koalaАй бұрын
@@santiagomadruga4298 these modern cameras are definitely up there with the Astro cameras, but I think part of the issue is that if you don’t cool them the will heat up to 40-50 degrees sometimes during a long exposure and at that temperature you will start experiencing some of these problems anyway