RocketSTEM Issue #9 - October 2014 | Page 25

is for the telescope and camera to have a solid base to attach to. The telescope: Any telescope is suitable for the Moon, and telescopes with longer focal lengths are good for both the Moon and planets. In photographic terms I have used a William Optics GTF-81 with a focal length of 478mm a Celestron C90 Mak (1250mm) and a Celestron C130 SLT (650mm) all with good results. Planetary imaging is better with the longer focal lengths and the Moon is good with all of the telescopes I have tried. The longer the focal length, the greater the magnification, resulting in a larger image on the webcam sensor. The computer: Although planetary imaging can be achieved on a Mac computer the main software components are designed to run on a PC platform. Out of preference I use a laptop running Windows XP, but the software runs on all versions of Windows. The laptop is useful to position near the telescope to enable easy focusing and adjustment of the equipment. Capture software: In order to transfer video from the webcam to the computer some software is required. If you have a specialised astronomy planetary camera or webcam then this will have software included to control the camera and save the output onto the computer. If you do not have capture software then there are a number of free applications available to download from the web. Two examples are SharpCap (http://www.sharpcap.co.uk) and wxAstroCapture (http://arnholm.org/ astro/software/wxAstroCapture/). Processing software: Again a commercial planetary camera will come with processing software, but it will mainly be the same freeware or shareware software that you can download from the Internet. The most popular processing application is called Registax (http://www.astronomie. be/registax/). This analises the video, determines which are the good images on them, aligns them, and A $10 Xbox webcam can take good images. The most difficult part of the Xbox webcam conversion was opening the casing. Credit Mike Barrett (www.wired4space.com) stacks them all into a single image. There are then some post processing options that can be applied to the image to bring out the detail. Webcam: I deliberately left the webcam to last as there are so many options that you have available. These range from buying a dedicated ‘Planetary Imaging’ or ‘Solar System Imager’; using a telescope guide