Mars 2025

15 views
Skip to first unread message

Trev S

unread,
Jan 8, 2025, 9:08:21 AMJan 8
to croydonastro
Attached is my attempt to image Mars a few weeks before its 2025 opposition. Mars is at its furthest orbital path this year, so it is quite a small subject not helped by the poor seeing and the overhead jetstream.  Captured at 23:00 on 7th January 2025 from my back garden in Surrey.

Celestron C9.25 with 2x Powermate giving f/20
SVBony 705C colour camera with IR cut filter
AZ-EQ6GT mount
Captured using SharpCap
Best 10% of 5000 frames at 1.5x drizzle
Processed with AutoStakkert v4 and Registax

Thanks for looking

Mars_20250107230031.jpg

Casper Dyne

unread,
Jan 9, 2025, 5:45:21 AMJan 9
to croydo...@googlegroups.com
Hi Trevor

The photo of Mars is brilliant, and I must say that I have made so many attempts with over exposure images. It is a difficult object to take and a well done to you! 
Astronomy is fun and a great hobby.
Casper

Sent from Outlook for iOS

From: croydo...@googlegroups.com <croydo...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Trev S <trevs...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 8, 2025 2:08:21 PM
To: croydonastro <croydo...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [croydonastro - 8007] Mars 2025
 
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "croydonastro" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to croydonastro...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/croydonastro/810735b1-a12d-465c-ad71-1c3b14220e14n%40googlegroups.com.

tcos...@gmail.com

unread,
Jan 9, 2025, 12:46:55 PMJan 9
to croydo...@googlegroups.com

Hi Trev

That’s a terrific image of Mars. I’ve seldom seen better! You’ve got both colour and detail plus the polar cap. Your C9.25 strikes again!

Well done

Tim C

 

From: croydo...@googlegroups.com <croydo...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Trev S
Sent: 08 January 2025 14:08
To: croydonastro <croydo...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [croydonastro - 8007] Mars 2025

 

Attached is my attempt to image Mars a few weeks before its 2025 opposition. Mars is at its furthest orbital path this year, so it is quite a small subject not helped by the poor seeing and the overhead jetstream.  Captured at 23:00 on 7th January 2025 from my back garden in Surrey.

--

drja...@aol.com

unread,
Jan 10, 2025, 2:57:21 AMJan 10
to croydo...@googlegroups.com, croydo...@googlegroups.com
Trev

It certainly is.  One of the clearest I've seen, despite Mars being small and with poor seeing!  The exposure time per frame must be relatively high too at f20.  

How is drizzling done for planetary targets?

James


Sent from my iPad

On 9 Jan 2025, at 17:46, tcos...@gmail.com wrote:



William Bottaci

unread,
Feb 18, 2025, 10:37:15 AMFeb 18
to croydo...@googlegroups.com
Hello Trevor
That's a pretty good image of Mars by any account; polar cap and distinct features; tracking must have been a challenge with the Powermate. Imagine how much better it would be by changing nothing on your side but to be fair it ought to be taken into account that this is not a favourable opposition, the latitude of the UK and the atmosphere, with the Jetstream to boot.
----
On drizzling (and not wishing to take away from your very good result but a related subject, especially as you've used it :), I see how it works for deep sky objects as they tend to be under-sampled, but for planetary and with your equipment, typically they tend to be over-sampled. A calculation:

  Formula for pixel scale (arcseconds/pixel) = (Pixel size (microns) * 206.265) / Focal Length (mm).
Ideally with average seeing we want a value between 0.67” and 2” per pixel. The calculation with your data:
  - Celestron C9.25 focal length with 2x Powermate: 4,700 mm
  - SVBony 705C colour camera pixel size: 2.9 μm
we get a value of 0.13" per pixel, which is well over-sampled.

It's unfortunate that poor seeing makes the situation worse.
As your camera can bin to 2x2 at least this would be a suggestion, but the result shows the 2x Powermate is unnecessary, for imaging, and so not using it would be equivalent...
----
Anyway, hoping the above is of help, and as said, a very good result, so thank you for sharing.
William




On Fri, 10 Jan 2025 at 07:57, 'drja...@aol.com' via croydonastro <croydo...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Trev
It certainly is.  One of the clearest I've seen, despite Mars being small and with poor seeing!  The exposure time per frame must be relatively high too at f20.  
How is drizzling done for planetary targets?
James



On Thu, 9 Jan 2025 at 17:46, <tcos...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Trev
That’s a terrific image of Mars. I’ve seldom seen better! You’ve got both colour and detail plus the polar cap. Your C9.25 strikes again!
Well done
Tim C



On Thu, 9 Jan 2025 at 10:45, Casper Dyne <caspe...@hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Hi Trevor
The photo of Mars is brilliant, and I must say that I have made so many attempts with over exposure images. It is a difficult object to take and a well done to you!
Astronomy is fun and a great hobby.
Casper



Mars_20250107230031.jpg
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages