Making frequent on-the-fly changes to gain isn’t really a good idea for guiding. It does affect the dark library and any bad-pix maps because the noise levels in the guider images will change. To predict how much it affects the dark library, I guess you would have to know exactly how the camera behaves. My impression is that most of the camera vendors have a recommended gain setting, probably one that optimizes signal-to-noise, and that’s probably what you should use. Perhaps you should run a set of experiments and find a gain setting that you can stick with.
Regards,
Bruce
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Yes, your interpretation of the ‘gain’ setting in PHD2 is correct – a percentage of the camera-defined range from min to max. When you are judging what’s “best”, you should be looking at the SNR of the guide camera frames, not the apparent brightness of stars. If you’re doing testing, you might want to save the guide cam frames and look at the statistics using whatever imaging tool you like. You could do the testing without using a dark library, then rebuild the library when you’ve decided on the gain setting you like.
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