Hi Kayronjm,
Thanks for the very kind words. I really appreciate that.
The best I can tell the initial problem was a case of the DA.
After revisiting my integrated narrow bands, I found the O3 (OIII) looked just a little too much like the Halpha. I reprocessed the O3 and combined this new version with the existing Halpha and S2 (SII). Voila, there was red!
So, all is well.
A couple of questions if you don't mind,
1. Do you see a hierarchy in the noise reduction scheme? First ATWT, then MMT and then ACDNR?
2. Once you start saving as 64bit, should each subsequent save be also at 64bit?
Cieli Sereni,
Mark
Ahh I see, I'm glad it worked out - looking great!
No problem at all.
1. I personally do indeed use ATWT first as it provides the most effective noise reduction in my honest opinion, massively reducing small scale noise more-so than I've ever achieved with MMT or ACDNR on their own. ACDNR for example tends to blur it out and make
noise blobs that look awful. ATWT seems to kill the small scale noise and then MMT can smooth it all out a little more. ACDNR can then be used to some small extent to ensure any remaining background noise is smoothed out. On my other workflow tutorial (HDR LRGB with Orion Nebula data) I did not use ATWT at all but only because I had not adopted it as a noise reduction technique just then. All worked out well in the end there with Orion Nebula but it really does depend on your data. I guess Rosette Nebula being dimmer than Orion Nebula meant more noise with the same number of subframes and exposure times, hence why ATWT was very helpful there.
2. When you first saved your image in 64-bit to start the non-linear stretch and further post-processing, subsequent saves of that image will automatically be in 64-bit format. If you are unsure, you can always make the initial save in 64-bit, close the image and re-open it (the 64-bit one). After the first 64-bit save, I keep it 64-bit all the way up to the very, very end result. I indeed keep the end result in 64-bit as well. I only go back down to 16-bit when I save my FITS end result from PixInsight into TIFF format for opening in Photoshop and adding a nice frame around the image with my name, object name, capture date and data used.
I hope that's helpful!