Celestron 91525, 11055, 11065 instruction manual Piggyback

Page 57

Piggyback

The easiest way to enter the realm of deep-sky, long exposure astrophotogra-

 

phy is via the piggyback method. Piggyback photography is done with a

 

camera and its normal lens riding on top of the telescope. Through piggyback

 

photography you can capture entire constellations and record large scale

 

nebulae that are too big for prime focus photography. Because you are

 

photographing with a low power lens and guiding with a high power telescope,

 

the margin for error is very large. Small mistakes made while guiding the

 

telescope will not show up on film. Use the optional piggyback mount to attach

 

the camera to the telescope.

 

As with any form of deep-sky photography, you must be at a dark sky observ-

 

ing site. Light pollution around major urban areas washes out the faint light of

 

deep-sky objects.

 

1.

Polar align the telescope (using one of the methods described earlier) and

 

 

start the clock drive.

 

2.

Load your camera with slide film, ISO 100 or faster, or print film, ISO 400

 

 

or faster!

 

3.

Set the f/ratio of your camera lens so that it is a half stop to one full stop

 

 

down from completely open.

 

4.

Set the shutter speed to the “B” setting and focus lens to infinity setting.

 

5.

Locate the area of the sky that you want to photograph and move the

 

 

telescope so that it points in that direction.

 

6.

Find a suitable guide star in the telescope field. This is relatively easy

 

 

since you can search a wide area without affecting the area covered by

 

 

your camera lens. If you do not have an illuminated cross hair eyepiece for

 

 

guiding, simply defocus your guide star until it fills most of the field of view.

 

 

This makes it easy to detect any drift.

 

7.

Release the shutter using a cable release.

 

8.

Monitor your guide star for the duration of the exposure. Make all correc-

 

 

tions using the hand controller.

 

9.

Close the camera’s shutter.

 

As for lenses, get good ones that produce sharp images near the edge of the

 

field. Generally, stay away from generic lenses. The lenses should have a

 

resolving power of 40 lines per millimeter. A good focal length range is 35 to

 

100mm for lenses designed for 35mm cameras.

Celestial Photography • 53

Image 57
Contents Page E C e l e s t r o n C M- 11 00/1400 B L E O F C O N T E N T S Iv Table of Contents T R O D U C T I O N How to Use This Manual Word of Caution Schmidt-Cassegrain Optical System Unpacking Your Celestron CM-1100 S E M B L I N G Y O U R C M 1 1 0CM-1100 Setting Up the Tripod Central Column Electronics Console Center Leg Brace Attaching the Center Leg Brace Attaching the Central ColumnAttaching the Equatorial Mount Installing Counterweight Installing Counterweight BarAttaching the Optical Tube to the Mount Attaching the Visual Back Installing the Star Diagonal Assembling Your CM-1100 Installing the Finder Installing the Polar Finder Moving the Telescope in R.A. and DEC Adjusting the Mount Balancing the Mount in R.A Balancing the Mount in DEC Assembling Your CM-1100 Technical Specifications Tripod Image Orientation L E S C O P E B a S I C SFocusing General Photography Hints Aligning the Finder Daytime Observing Your First LookNighttime Observing Calculating Magnification Determining Field of View Celestial Coordinate System T R O N O M Y B a S I C SMotion of the Stars Definition Polar AlignmentFinding the Pole Latitude Scales Pointing at Polaris Polar Axis Finder Declination Drift Aligning the R.A. Setting Circle Setting the DEC Circle I N G T H E D R I V E Powering Up the DriveGuide Speed BC Backlash Correction Periodic Error Correc- tionHC/CCD Hand Controller Northern/Southern Hemisphere OperationAutoguiding DEC ReverseObserving the Moon L E S T I a L O B S E R V I N GObserving the Sun Observing Deep-Sky Objects Using Your Setting CirclesStar Hopping Celestial Observing Transparency Viewing ConditionsSky Illumination Seeing ConditionsCelestial Observing L E S T I a L P H O T O G R a P H Y Lunar Phase ISO Crescent Quarter Short Exposure Prime FocusFull Celestial Photography Piggyback Celestial Photography Eyepiece Projection Planet ISO Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Long Exposure Prime Focus Celestial Photography CCD Imaging Description of F-numbers Fastar ConfigurationImaging at f/7 Imaging at f/11 Medium size to small galaxiesLunar or small planetary nebulae Planetary or Lunar Imaging at f/22L E S C O P E M a I N T E N a N C E Care and Cleaning of the Optics CollimationTelescope Maintenance Telescope Maintenance T I O N a L a C C E S S O R I E S Optional Accessories Optional Accessories Optional Accessories Mag Type Proper Name ConstNGC# Spiral Galaxy Magnitude Epoch Star Name ConstellationAtlases Astronomy TextsGeneral Observational Astronomy Visual ObservationCelestron ONE Year Warranty