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Post by Deleted on Nov 15, 2016 10:48:42 GMT
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Post by davy on Nov 15, 2016 13:28:22 GMT
Wow,,that is fantastic capture,,need to put my hands up and confess I've never been a fan of solar observing,,I wrongly thought it would bite me to tears,,, I have to eat my hat now I think,, totally stunning,,like something off the TV,,well done.. I was a bit worried when I read the software process that there would be a loss in quality with it going through so many changes of format,,, I obviously not,, a nice tutorial write up on the software would be nice 😂
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Post by Deleted on Nov 15, 2016 15:17:46 GMT
thanks! Well to be honest I think if I did this again I would change the way I did it quite substantially - I kind of muddled through the process - quite a learning experience but good fun though. Solar in HA is one of the coolest applications for video astronomy in my opinion. But it's cool to watch proms develop they go pretty fast as do flares so it's very dynamic and "live". How does the embed code work for vimeo by the way Davy? I did a negative version too I'll try post. That shows a lot more detail.
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Post by howie1 on Nov 16, 2016 0:04:05 GMT
Great stuff Nick. I have a mate in the USA who loves the quark. He got the chromasphere one (I think its called) but found it also did the surface stuff very well (I think they sell a chromasphere and a surface feature one or something like that).
How long a time period did you shoot the frames for that video? IE I thought flares and such took a day to rise up and move about as the distances are so great. Interested to know.
cheers
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Post by Dragon Man on Nov 16, 2016 9:51:07 GMT
Stunning results Nick. Nice sharp focus on the Solar surface granulation
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