Author Topic: Discovering Pluto's moons with PixInsight (and Hubble, and a tutorial)  (Read 2367 times)

Offline georg.viehoever

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Hi,

I recently came  across this nice tutorial by NASA http://encompass.gsfc.nasa.gov/caseStudies/moon.pdf , explaining a bit how the Nix and Hydra, the moons of Pluto, were discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope and some clever image processing. You can get the data from http://archive.stsci.edu/proposal_search.php?mission=hst&id=10774 (doing it like a real scientist), or simply download it from http://encompass.gsfc.nasa.gov/data.html. You can easily reproduce the result with PI, if you like:

- align the science frames of the *_drz*.fits files using a single point alignment on Pluto (not the stars, they are moving in the background) with DynamicAlignment
- integrate the aligned images with ImageIntegration, using Linear Fit Clipping.

The attached screenshot shows this:
- bottom left: one of the science frames as provided by Hubble. Lots of cosmics and star trails
- top right: integration without pixel rejection. Start trails still visible
- top left: ImageIntegration with pixel rejection
The two very bright spots are Pluto and Charon, the small ones to the top right of Pluto are Nix and Hydra.

Enjoy,
Georg
« Last Edit: 2014 December 17 10:41:02 by georg.viehoever »
Georg (6 inch Newton, unmodified Canon EOS40D+80D, unguided EQ5 mount)

Offline georg.viehoever

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Update: Added data source from enCOMPASS.
Georg (6 inch Newton, unmodified Canon EOS40D+80D, unguided EQ5 mount)