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AW: [APML] ESO Tarantula CCD image
Hi Jerry,
I don't know if Mischa Schirmer is reading this list. But I know that he
usualy knows what he is doing.
You can reach him under
mailto:mischa@MPA-Garching.MPG.DE
He is pro and amateur in one person.
A few days ago he explained the steps that he used to process this image
on the german CCD-list. Unfortunately I deleted that mail.
Regards
Andreas
:=================================
: Andreas Roerig
: Bahnhofstr. 16
: 65599 Dornburg-Wilsenroth
: Tel. 06436/28137
: http://home.t-online.de/home/a.roerig/index.htm
: (Letzte Aktualisierung: 03.06.2002)
> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: owner-astro-photo@seds.org
> [mailto:owner-astro-photo@seds.org] Im Auftrag von Jerry Lodriguss
> Gesendet: Freitag, 14. Juni 2002 07:16
> An: astro-photo@seds.org
> Betreff: [APML] ESO Tarantula CCD image
>
>
> It appears the pros are using techniques developed by
> amateurs, which would
> be something to be proud of, but the pros are doing it incorrectly!
>
> Scroll down to the bottom of this page to the technical
> information about
> the photos:
>
http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/pr-2002/phot-14-02.html
It says:
>is an LRGB composite image, using a processing technique known as
>"Luminance Layering". The red, green and blue images were stacked for
the
>Luminance (L) channel, yielding a black and white, high S/N-ratio
image.
>In order to show details in the bright centre of the nebula as well as
the
>much fainter outer filaments, a non-linear filtering technique known as
>"DDP" (cf. http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~rt6k-okn/viewgrap.htm for more
>details) was applied to the Luminance image. In parallel, the three
colour
>channels were combined in the usual way into an RGB colour image. The
>colour information from the latter image was then copied onto the
>Luminance image.
Notice they are making the luminance layer out of a combination of the
red,
green and blue filtered images.
I wonder if they know they are not gaining anything by doing this
because
they did not shoot a separate high resolution luminance channel with a
higher signal to noise ratio to start with.
The signal to noise ratio from combining the RGB channels is the same if
it's color, or if it's black and white.
I'm not talking about applying Okano's DDP to the image.
Maybe someone should clue them in... <G>
Jerry
Astronomical photography: http://www.astropix.com
Sports Photography: http://www.astropix.com/SPORTSPIX/INDEX.HTM
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