Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Grand rehearsal

Time for the grand rehearsal - doing everything I'm planning to do on eclipse day; outside in the real world. This is essential for success. I should be doing this many times, but - as usual - I am late and there's only time for one test.

Setting up went fine - I've done it many times already. Rotated the camera so that the diurnal motion aligned with the long axis of the sensor. This takes roughly half an hour, but there should be plenty of time during the partial phase for this.
Setting up for the grand rehearsal. If only the clouds would go away...

I struggled to focus on the sun using the white light filter and focusing mask. The extreme contrast of the scene (blank, white sun surrounded by blackness) confuses some automatic contrast adjustments to the liveview display - especially when I zoom in on the solar edge. This kind of focusing works beautifully on the moon and on stars. I don't know how to solve this! Maybe the eclipsed sun will work better. Maybe I'll just have to dump liveview and use actual images. I wonder how others do this?? Frustrating....

While fumbling with liveview I discovered that doing so eats up the battery extremely fast! Around 10-15 minutes of liveview is all it takes to fully deplete the battery. For all other camera operations the battery efficiency is really good, so this caught me by surprise. Not nice to discover on eclipse day. I have ordered two spare batteries since I only had one. Phwew....

The time to execute all 770 planned images is roughly one hour and I didn't experience any other battery problems. Switching memory cards went fine.

I tested placing the solar edge at the left edge of the field of view (FOV) at precisely 6 minutes prior to mid-eclipse. I have previously calculated that this should result in perfect framing during mid-eclipse. The image below is a combination of the first and last shot of my eclipse sequence. The centering is very good and diurnal drift is well contained within the FOV. Should work fine on eclipse day - I'll use Eclipse Orchestrator to calculate the precise time once we have arrived on location.
First and last shot from the totality imaging script combined. Framing is perfect! 

Apropos location: I tested using my smartphone to get the GPS coordinates. Worked fine using Google maps (touch and hold the blue 'here' indicator, see a red pin appear with the GPS coordinates displayed in the search box at the top). Now I just need to get a GPS certified time signal - haven't figured that out yet.



Sunday, August 6, 2017

Callibration frames

High resolution imaging of the corona has been pushed to stunning new heights by Miloslav Druckmüller and colleagues. An important feature of their work is more rigorous image processing than what is normally used. Doing this properly results in less image noise which in turn enables more aggressive image processing to bring out subtle details. Still, Miloslavs images do not look overly processed - they just look like the real thing as you can see visually unaided or with a small binocular.

To achieve low noise images it is vital to do proper image callibration; i.e. bias, dark and flat field correction. I do combined bias and dark correction by taking 40 images at each setting used during totality with the lens hood on and the setup covered by black cloth. These are taken just after totality has ended. I use 13 different settings during totality, so this amounts to 13x40=520 images! Afterwards the solar filter and lens hood is replaced by a white cloth, fastened with a rubber band. Using ISO 100 and whatever exposure time gives a signal around 1/3 of full well capacity (typically around 1/1000 sec) I then do 210 flat field images. Finally, 40 more bias+dark frames are taken at the same setting.

This is really boring work and it is done during the remaining partial phase of the eclipse. My DSLR card capacity is 8GB - equal to 296 full resolution raw images. I will be taking 77 images of totality, followed by 770 callibration images! I have two memory cards, so when one is full I'll switch card and start transferring images to my computer using a card reader. In this way the camera will be working non-stop and all images acquired in as short a time span as possible. This is important since the camera noise can vary with time and ambient temperature.

An overview of my complete imaging plan is shown below. I'll be running five Eclipse Orchestrator scripts over the course of one hour - resulting in 847 images. All just to get one - hopefully great - image of the eclipsed Sun!

Overview of my imaging plan, along with details of exposure settings and what to do when.
A typical flat field image. The response variations are ~5% of the total signal.

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Filtering and masking

A solar filter is required for scope aiming, focusing and DSLR orientation prior to the eclipse. This filter is only removed during totality or else the camera will be fried. It must be fast and easy to remove without applying much force to the setup. The perfect solution for this is the solar safety film from Baader Planetarium. This is high quality, cheap and easy to build into a filter cell of your own making. My daughter and I had a fun rainy afternoon doing this using just some carton, gaffer tape and a circular cutting tool.
Building our Solar filter using Baader film.
Another important tool is the focusing mask. The solar disc does not offer much focusing help - you basically are left with gauging the fuzziness of the sharp horns of the eclipsed Sun. By using a simple mask with two opposing holes at the edge of the main objective two distinct images of the Sun will result. Even when slightly out-of-focus these two images will not overlap. Only at precise focus do they merge into one image, see an example below using the moon. Such a mask is a great tool for achieving tack-sharp focus on eclipse day. The last focusing tweak should be done 10-15 minutes before totality, thereby minimizing the risk of focus drift.

Solar filter and focusing mask.

Focussing on the moon using the mask. When out of focus two distinct images
are formed. Only at perfect focus do the merge into one.

Orientation and aiming

The DSLR camera can easily be rotated to any angle. The Sun is round, so you'd think that just getting the Sun properly centered would be enough. Wrong! The corona during solar minimum (which we are approaching) is elongated along the ecliptic.
Corona at solar minimum (left) and maximum (right).
Ecliptic is oriented along horizontal axis.
The Sun's motion in the sky due to Earths rotation (diurnal motion) is tilted relative to the ecliptic by the tilt of the Earths rotation axis. At the time of eclipse this angle is 20 degrees. For fixed mounts you want the long axis of the image roughly aligned with this motion so that there's as much image space as possible to contain the Sun's motion during the eclipse. It turns out that during this particular eclipse there is yet another reason for orienting the camera like this - and that reason is named Regulus!

Regulus is a bright (mag. 1.4) star, which - by fortunate cosmic coincidence - will be situated just 1.3 degrees from the Sun during totality. That can make for a nice visual: having a distant star embedded in the outer reaches of the corona. (It also helps a lot during image processing). I don't know if Regulus will be visible (and how much so) in my setup, but I'd like to give it a try. Below is shown the field-of-view (FOV) with my setup. The long axis of the image is aligned with the diurnal motion. The corona will be nicely framed, with the long equatorial extensions reaching out along the ecliptic. Regulus will also be well positioned.
Simulated field of view with my setup (Nikon D300, f=400mm). The bright star to the left is Regulus.
The time it takes for the Sun to move from the left-most edge to the center of my FOV is 6 minutes and 3 seconds, see the illustration below. I can get perfect framing during mid-eclipse by placing the edge of the crescent Sun precisely at the left edge of the DSLR viewfinder at the correct time. With totality lasting just over two minutes this time is five minutes before it starts. After arriving at the final location, I'll just have to calculate the precise time of second contact, then do this final telescope aiming 5 minutes before that time. This will be the final adjustment required and then I can ignore the imaging setup completely - confident of perfect framing and being able to enjoy the eclipse with my own senses!
Placing the crescent Sun at the left edge of the FOV precisely 5 minutes before
totality starts will result in perfect framing at mid-eclipse.