PixInsight Intensive Workshop

By Vicent Peris
1 – 7 February 2015, AlcanalĂ­, Valencia, Spain

This workshop aims at giving a comprehensive operational/technical understanding of Pixinsight to a small group of participants (5–10) over the course of 7 concentrated working days.

Participants will bring all their own unprocessed data sets which will be processed during the week. The structure of the seminar will allow participants an in-depth view of Pixinsight, with the goal of having a total immersion in the process of the image creation.

Workshop language will be English.


Workshop Dates and Venue

The workshop will take place in a Mediterranean villa which houses also several telescopes and domes.

The workshop will start on Sunday, February 1st, and will run through Saturday, February 7th. We suggest arriving in the area on Saturday, January 31th, and departing on Sunday, February 8th.

Please contact Colin Cooper (Astroinspain(at)yahoo(dot)com) for further details regarding logistics.

Number of Participants

The aim of this workshop is to have a close encounter with the PixInsight platform and the teacher, so a maximum of 10 participants will be allowed for the full week. Each participant should bring his/her laptop and portable drive to share the data to be processed.

Rates and Registration

With a total duration of 45 hours, the registration price is 750 Euros. Click the button below to register through PayPal.

Lodging Options

You need to make your own boarding/meals arrangements.

The following link gives an overview of the area from a touristic point of view:

http://www.spain-holiday.com/Jalon

Near the villa there are several accomodation options:

  • El Cid Bar & Restaurant, 10 km away from the villa, is a restaurant and bar that also has accomodation. The owners are English and very friendly; the rates are 49 EUR for a double room including continental breakfast.
  • Denia Marriott La Sella is a five-star hotel about 20-min drive from the villa.
  • TripAdvisor gives an overview of local restaurants within minutes from the villa.

Workshop Sponsors


Workshop Methodology

People should expect a general feature / in-depth tour of Pixinsight. The workshop is divided in common and individual processing sessions. The common sessions will be run with entire processing examples. Therefore, starting from completely raw data sets, each participant will learn to assemble / generate unprocessed data into respective master files while gaining an understanding of how to pre-process the raw data for optimal signal to noise levels.

The post-processing will be focused on singular techniques that will cover the main imaging needs of the participants. Each example will be processed from start to finish with everyone in the class, processing the same image set at the same time. This will allow all participants to learn the details of each step of the workflow, while appreciating that the workflow will vary depending on the quality and characteristics of the data.

The aim of the workshop is to get everybody in the class up to speed using Pixinsight. The small size of the class will ensure that the class moves together at a steady pace, learning by doing.

The first day will be dedicated to understand the general workflow in the PixInsight platform and to inspect the available data sets and their special characteristics. From the second to the sixth day we'll process the selected data sets. The last day will be reserved to review all the different workflows developed during the week and to do a detailed critique of individual choices made by each student in the processing of the images.


Workshop Documentation

Each attendee will be provided with a workshop book. This book will have all the needed workflow charts, basic processing examples and a detailed article for each start to finish example.

Workflow Charts

Each participant will have a full set of PixInsight workflow charts describing the techniques reviewed during the weekend. Covering the main concepts in a visual style, these charts will help you to carry out your own work at home. The workflow charts will cover also the start to finish examples so you won't be lost in these longer cases.

A pendrive with all the images, projects and process icons will be also provided to all the participants.


Start-to-Finish Examples

In this workshop we'll review the following examples:

Click on the images for full-size versions.

HDR / LRGB - Messier 42

Data provided by Al Vinjamur - www.alvinjamur.com

This example will cover mainly these topics:

  • Multiple exposure set management with the BatchPreprocessing script.
  • HDR image assembling with HDRComposition.
  • LRGB Combination.
  • Dynamic range compression.

Narrowband palettes - Rosette Nebula

Data provided by Al Vinjamur - www.alvinjamur.com

This example will cover mainly these topics:

  • Hubble's and alternative palettes.
  • PixelMath.
  • Star color correction.

HDR / HaLRGB - Messier 31

Data provided by Adrien Richardson.

This example will cover mainly these topics:

  • Multiple exposure set management in BPP.
  • HDR image assembling with HDRComposition. LRGB with high dynamic range L component and low dynamic range RGB components.
  • H-alpha enhancement with linear images.
  • Denoising and masking techniques.

Sample Images Processed by Students of Previous Intensive Workshops

Click on the images for full-size versions.


Messier 17 (SHO) - Colin Cooper


Messier 51 (HaRGB) - HST data / Tyler Ferrari


Horsehead nebula and Messier 78 - Colin Cooper


NGC 6992 - Edward Popovitch


About Vicent Peris

With more than a 15-year career as an astrophotographer, Vicent Peris (Valencia, Spain, 1980) has been working for the last 7 years at the Astronomical Observatory of the University of Valencia (OAUV). He is now leading the world-renowned astrophotographic programs at Calar Alto Observatory (CAHA) with the 3.5 meter and 1.23 meter Zeiss telescopes, the latter in collaboration with the Documentary School of Astrophotography (DSA), applying innovative image processing techniques and software tools. This is the first astrophotography project in the world with access to the observational time of professional telescopes.

You can see some of the published images of the Calar Alto project on the Gallery section of PixInsight's website, as well as some of Vicent's articles about his image processing techniques on the Processing Examples section.

His works have been published and awarded by some of the most reputed publications worldwide, such as APOD, Scientific American, National Geographic, Bad Astronomy Blog, and Sterne und Weltraum.

Vicent is also the official astrophotographer of the ALHAMBRA Survey, a deep cosmological survey conducted by an international scientific collaboration, acquired from Calar Alto Observatory using the 3.5 meter Zeiss telescope. This survey is the first in the world to use a new instrumental technique known as photometric redshifts, in which low-resolution spectra for each object in an image are obtained by using a large, 23 narrow-filter set covering the 3500 – 9500 angstrom light band. You can see some image samples at Vicent's website.

Vicent has also successful experience in forensics and is currently working as an image processing specialist for the Spanish National Police department since two years.

For more information about Vicent's works, please download his portfolio.