Hi everyone, I'm just starting out in astrophotography and recently made my first real exposures of the night sky. Coming from Singapore, it was immensely humbling to see the night sky for the first time in a place with so little light pollution. After trying out Deep Sky Stacker and ImagesPlus (Roger Clark of clarkvision.com favourite tools), I encountered a great deal of frustration with broken color management, file format issues, poor star alignment and sub-par interpolation for resampling. I just received a trial version of PixInsight and I must say I am extremely impressed thus far. I've only explored it a little bit (alignment, integration and drizzle), and I still have much to learn about astrophotography image processing.
I have a problem with the drizzle function at the moment. It is causing the image's brightness to shift to a darker tone, while the color more or less remains similar. Is there a way to prevent this? Perhaps turn off any normalization or scaling to prevent this?
When using ImageIntegration, I turn off all normalization and scaling to preserve the original brightness and color from getting shifted. I read about this in Roger Clark's articles, which seem to be very, very good. He is adamant against any channel scaling, which he says ruins star colors and to restore those colors perfectly later is difficult to impossible, and invariably causes more noise to be visible from added image processing. He recommends PixInsight users to turn off any normalization. I read on the PixInsight website that in fact normalization is especially necessary for pixel rejection, for meaningful statistical rejection. It sounds perfectly logical to me. I understand PixInsight is not doing per channel scaling causing colors to shift, but performing an overall scaling adjustment so the luminance remains more constant between images. In my Lights exposures, there were no clouds at all and the illumination levels were very constant, so I see no difference with normalization turned on or off for ImageIntegration, which seems logical too. Please correct me if I am wrong. In my exposures for the landscape, I was a little late and was shooting in astronomical to nautical dawn, so each exposure was slightly brighter as time passed. I tried my best to manually normalize them in my raw converter, but it was not perfect, and thus leaving normalization on caused relatively large brightness shifts between the final stacked results, which proved disastrous for stitching later. Turning off normalization resulted in virtually no brightness shifting and my panorama was saved.
I've tried looking for such a setting in DrizzleIntegration, but to no avail. I had thought turning off 'Enable Image Weighting' would solve it, but it didn't. I ended up with exactly the same (darker) result. Please see the attached image example, which shows one of the light frames on the left, and a regular integrated stack in the middle (exactly the same except for better S/N), and the darker result with drizzle integration on the right. I understand what is causing this brightness shift. I greatly appreciate any advise. Thank you!