Star trail HELP!

Mos

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For weeks now I've been attempting to take some star trail pics. I understand how to do them, small f number, 30 sec shutter speed, then take 30+ mins worth of pics, merge them together, a bit of editing - lovely.

But, I've been taking some in my back garden, where there is artificial light - which I don't think is the problem. I look at the sky and there's like 10 stars, obviously there's millions, I just can't see them..

Of course, I take them at night 8 o clock ish. So what am i doing wrong? Thanks guys.
 
For best results, you will need to be 20-30+ miles away from any city lights in the direction of the Northern star. On a clear night with a new moon or when the moon isn't present. I would also suggest waiting until after 10:00 or about then to shoot. It will be darker than at 8:00.

I am currently reading the book Photography Night Sky by Jennifer Wu and James Martin and they have a chapter on star trails that was really good. I'm looking forward to getting out and trying some of the things she suggests. (I get to meet her in a couple of weeks as well.)
 
10 stars indeed.

With our human eyes there are approximately 6000 stars which should be visible... but since we can only see stars in the direction facing 'away' from the Sun (the Sun washing out all hope of seeing stars during the daytime) you can cut that number to about 3000. That's stars to "roughly" magnitude 6 (each 1 point of difference on the magnitude scale represents a difference in brightness of about 2.5 -- it's technically the 5th root of 100 (5√100) but 2.5 is pretty close.)

Light pollution, as you've no doubt discovered, is a killer.

Here's a comparison.

This first image was shot in light polluted skies. Look closely... there's a nebula in this image (in this case it's a planetary nebula called the Dumbbell nebula, also known as Messier 27.)

LIGHT_120s_800iso_+75f_00498stdev_20151103-23h13m01s002ms.JPG


Mostly you don't see the nebula... you see mud. That mud is the effect of light pollution.

Here's a cleaned up version of the same image. But to get this one, I used a special light pollution filter which rejects a lot of the areas of the visible spectrum where the wavelengths for mercury vapor lighting and high-pressure sodium lighting, but allows the parts of the spectrum for hydrogen alpha wavelengths (the red parts) and oxygen iii wavelengths (the teal-blue). This caused the entire image to have a strong "blue" cast and I had to work to clean all this up. BTW, that light pollution filter forced me to increase my exposure time to 8x longer (don't use filters for star trails).

Dumbbell Nebula.jpg


That's quite a difference.

A few tips:

1) Get away from the light... and I mean AWAY from the light. It's best to leave the city. We will often drive an hour out of the city to get to dark(er) skies (getting excellent dark skies often requires driving for many hours.) Point your camera in a direction facing AWAY from the city. If you want the stars to swirl around the north star, then drive NORTH so that the city is to your south. Now your camera is pointing away from the city instead of toward the city (where you'll get the "light dome" of urban lighting.)

2) You need a MOONLESS night. Check our calendar... you want to do this preferably near a "new moon" (because the moon is only up during the daytime and not at nighttime.) You can even use a 3rd quarter moon because that phase is rising just a few hours before dawn but is not visible in the hours after sunset (so you get about half the night before the moon shows up.) The moon creates a lot of light pollution.

3) If you can do this on a night with good "transparency" that's even better. Poor transparency is caused by things such as high humidity (a haze in the air) or dust, smog, etc. All those particles in the air will glow and create the muddy looking sky background. When the air is really clear, there's less stuff to light up so you get darker background skies and better contrast even if you otherwise have the same amount of urban light pollution.

4) You will need to adjust your images by adjusting the "levels" or "curves" tool to minimize the muddy sky background. If you think of this in a sort of Ansel Adams "Zone System", you're trying to send the darker zones (e.g. zones 1, 2, & 3) to "black" (zone 0). Many astroiemagers will argue that the sky shouldn't be "black" (you don't want pixel RGB values of 0,0,0) but just very very dark... (e.g. pixel RGB values of say 15, 15, 15).
 
Oddly enough, I just made my first star trails effort 2 nights ago. This was from my back yard, just over three hours' worth of shots. I used a fairly large aperture, f:2.8, and minimum ISO, 100 on my camera. I set the tripod up, aimed the camera north, and set the intervalometer. I took 15-second shots, and I can't really tell you why, because that made for WAY too many layers in the assembly process! I would have liked a wider view, but this was from my back yard, suburban-style neighborhood, and wide would have included the back of the house, the fence at the back of the yard, and probably traffic on the side street. The tree at the top left was lit when the neighbor behind turned on his stadium-level floodlights to let his dog out.

What I would do differently having made this attempt:

30-second exposures. I just don't know what I was thinking with 15, other than maybe I had it in my head from other night shooting, like Milky Way shots, that 15 seconds was about the limit to avoid trails from the stars. But I was shooting star trails!!!!! (Idiot....) :BangHead:

Wider view, with a useful foreground/landscape in the shot. That was not available from the back yard, and I wasn't going to drive 50 miles to a dark spot just to see if I could do this.

I think I would leave the other exposure factors alone. Low ISO, reasonably large aperture. I was wanting black sky, but I may have ended up losing some "weight" in my trails. 30 seconds would be double what I did, so until I try it and see different, I think that would be where I want to be. I got more colors than I expected to get, though.

24695225360_3bc34e6ae0_o.jpg
 

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