• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Astrophotography and aperture

CuriousMike

Diamond Member
During last nights trip to the observatory, I had an idea to compare what exactly f/1.4 got me compared to my older f2.8 lens.

So, I took a series of night photos from f1.4, f1.8, f2.8 and f4.0 to see exactly what the effect was.

I whipped a page together to easily group the photos together.

Maybe someone will find it useful

https://coustier.smugmug.com/Blog/Astroaperture
 
A nice tracking rig lets you use longer exposures at lower ISOs and wider apertures. Stacking photos can help too - I only really do long exposures untracked when I'm doing the northern lights or a meteor shower. (Only done the Norther Lights once, back in March of this year in Iceland. Got REALLY lucky and saw an amazing show.)
 
A nice tracking rig lets you use longer exposures at lower ISOs and wider apertures. Stacking photos can help too - I only really do long exposures untracked when I'm doing the northern lights or a meteor shower. (Only done the Norther Lights once, back in March of this year in Iceland. Got REALLY lucky and saw an amazing show.)

I understand that a tracking rig can help - I'm not *that* deep in astrophotography yet.

I have used stacking to great effect for an Andromeda Galaxy photo I did last year.
I suppose I should try stacking a series of MW photos I did this past weekend...
 
So what was the conclusion from this test? Did f/1.4 get you what you wanted? It would have been interesting to compare equivalent exposures for the different f-stops. So an f/1.4 5 second exposure versus an f/2.0 10 second exposure and f/2.8 20 second exposure. Or a similar range with ISO - f/1.4, 10 seconds, ISO800 vs f/2.8, 10 seconds, ISO3200 to see how much noise the ISO adds and can be cancelled with noise reduction.
 
Back
Top