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GeneralBoomeranging Telescopic and Kaleidoscopic Phrase Maze of the Day ("Hear Here") Pin
B. Clay Shannon29-Sep-15 4:15
professionalB. Clay Shannon29-Sep-15 4:15 
GeneralHow NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) PinPopular
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 3:47
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 3:47 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Slacker00729-Sep-15 3:57
professionalSlacker00729-Sep-15 3:57 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
den2k8829-Sep-15 4:01
professionalden2k8829-Sep-15 4:01 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) PinPopular
W Balboos, GHB29-Sep-15 4:21
W Balboos, GHB29-Sep-15 4:21 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
den2k8829-Sep-15 4:34
professionalden2k8829-Sep-15 4:34 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 5:20
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 5:20 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 5:15
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 5:15 
The people doing them at NASA are scientists who know how to use adobe's tools, because (aside from the Hubble Heritage image every year) they're taken for scientific purposes first and foremost; the cameras aren't designed to make pretty pictures out of the box; you get a bunch of RAW files that need even more work than what comes out of your DSLR before they look presentable.

Even ignoring false color (IR/UV/Xray or narrow band) images your baseline images are all taken with a monochrome sensor with sequential exposures with red, green, and blue filters in place (and for fainter objects often a much longer one without any filter at all); also in many cases instead of a single exposure in each channel you take a bunch of shorter ones so you can throw out any bad ones instead of trying to fix them in post (eg vibrations smudging things, your target drifting because you didn't have the scope perfectly aligned, etc). Afterwards you've got a set of HDR raws with the interesting variations in contrast often in several disparate segments of the range: near the top for stars (assuming they aren't all overexposed and blown out) and somewhere in the middle for nebula or distant galaxies. In cases with even greater contrast spreads you might have exposures of differing durations to avoid blowing out the brightest objects while still getting the dimmest above the noise floor; in which case you'll have more than just the baseline 12/16 bits of HDR to compress (generally non-linearly) into a good image.

Images taken with space telescopes will also need to have streaks from cosmic rays edited out; those on the ground may have streaks from satellites, aircraft, or meteors although unlike cosmic rays they're often rare enough you can just toss one or two of several dozen frames and ignore them. Excluding some consumer telescope designs, you'll also have diffraction spikes on bright stars from the holder for your secondary mirror. The example in the Adobe article processed them out, but some people prefer to have them in.

None of this is to say you can't just hang a DSLR off the end of a telescope and still get better results than pros did with giant scopes 30 years ago (at this point I wouldn't be surprised if even a smartphone would top old film results); but the processing in DSLRs is optimized for different use cases; meaning you're at a disadvantage vs people working with dedicated astro-imaging cameras.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius

Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt

GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Slacker00729-Sep-15 6:43
professionalSlacker00729-Sep-15 6:43 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Amarnath S29-Sep-15 4:24
professionalAmarnath S29-Sep-15 4:24 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 5:23
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 5:23 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Amarnath S29-Sep-15 5:43
professionalAmarnath S29-Sep-15 5:43 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 6:03
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 6:03 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Amarnath S29-Sep-15 6:27
professionalAmarnath S29-Sep-15 6:27 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 7:14
Dan Neely29-Sep-15 7:14 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Amarnath S29-Sep-15 16:52
professionalAmarnath S29-Sep-15 16:52 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Dan Neely30-Sep-15 2:45
Dan Neely30-Sep-15 2:45 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Amarnath S30-Sep-15 4:29
professionalAmarnath S30-Sep-15 4:29 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
mark.gross@deq.idaho.gov30-Sep-15 4:46
mark.gross@deq.idaho.gov30-Sep-15 4:46 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Amarnath S1-Oct-15 19:19
professionalAmarnath S1-Oct-15 19:19 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
mark.gross@deq.idaho.gov2-Oct-15 4:05
mark.gross@deq.idaho.gov2-Oct-15 4:05 
GeneralRe: How NASA makes the images they share (for APOD fans) Pin
Bob Fera30-Sep-15 6:44
Bob Fera30-Sep-15 6:44 
GeneralFSOW WSO Pin
Tim Carmichael29-Sep-15 1:24
Tim Carmichael29-Sep-15 1:24 
GeneralRe: FSOW WSO Pin
Chris Copeland29-Sep-15 1:42
mveChris Copeland29-Sep-15 1:42 
GeneralRe: FSOW WSO Pin
Tim Carmichael29-Sep-15 1:45
Tim Carmichael29-Sep-15 1:45 

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