willis 寫:社長, Which software can help to calculate the angle between two celestial objects? Or one needs to calculated by hand. I know the field rotation is small in funoooo's case. I want to do some calculation.
Willis, you just need to understand the angle of guide star from the farthest edge of the camera field, which you can look up from a star map, or measure from The Sky software. Then you need also the focal length of imaging telescope, exposure time, and polar alignment error and declination of your imaging target, then you can calculate the length of worst case star trails on your image due to field rotation.
this is the mathematic model, sorry I surrender....
http://www.stargazing.net/yizen/fieldrotation.htmlhttp://celestialwonders.com/articles/po ... curacy.pdffor me, an online calculator is good enough for the purpose.
http://celestialwonders.com/tools/rotat ... rCalc.htmlif you keep everything the same but changing the guide star angle, it clearly illustrate that the farer from the the guide star the longer the star trails will be. That's why I say someone is too early to conclude funoooo have field rotation even before checking what guide star he is using. Because the star trails will be in circular form rotating around the guide star, now clearly the trailings are on the opposite side that it "should be" - clearly not due to field rotation, unless funoooo is actually guide on 心宿七 not 心宿一 which is on the left side of the picture.
this is the data I used to evaluate funoooo's case,
Alignment Error 5 arcmins
Guide Star Angle 5 degrees
Focal Length 530 millimeters
Time minutes 3 minutes
Declination 0 degrees
it show that with a not accurate yet reasonable polar alignment, e.g, 5min, funoooo will only get <1um star trails on his worse part of the image, which is still much less than 1 pixel of his camera, which should not be noticeable even at 100% scale.
That's why you still get acceptable result in Taiwan last time even imaging M31 for 10min and guide on Jupiter at 40 degree away, the movement of Jupiter is actually more a problem than polar alignment. Of course such case is undesirable, the only reason I told you to do was you don't have a dew-remove on your guidescope, so only Jupiter works that night, right?
sorry to say, if someone want to attack LVI guider and off-axis guiding technique, he should better prepare himself studying the basics of polar alignment and guiding technique, otherwise, keep attacking other people with wrong assumption and misunderstanding of the basics, or even worse, attacking other people with image resolution that he can never reproduced with the same focal length or even longer, will only make himself a joke.