After a star tracking project I got hooked on astronomy. This post wraps up my first attempt photographing the Moon.

The Rig

Astrophotography can get extremely expensive. I’m a rookie therefore I tried to keep everything affordable. My 300$ rig:

The Raspberry Pi 3 connected to the camera

An "extra" universal T-Adapter

The rig assembled and ready

First Image

31. January 2018, the Blue Moon and a clear sky made a perfect opportunity for a first test. I pointed the equatorial mount towards the celestial north pole and adjusted the motor to account for the Earth’s rotation. After I attached the “extra” universal T-Adapter the telescope was ready. Then I adjusted the focal point using raspistill ’s preview over Wi-Fi .

A Blue Moon has nothing to do with the color

After a bit of fiddling with the parameters I decided to set shutter speed to 10 seconds and leave everything else untouched. This was definitely not a smart move. Fine-tuning recording parameters is important. Moreover, automatic tuning of parameters will ruin your long running recording series! But for this first project the goal was to accumulate know-how. The perfect shot is out of my reach, yet.

$ raspistill \ --stats \ --mode 3 \ --encoding bmp \ --quality 100 \ --timestamp \ --output 'moon%d.bmp' \ --shutter 10000 \ --timeout 0 \ --nopreview

I choose to use BMP encoding for the images. Simply because I thought a bitmap is the closest I can get to a RAW image. This assumption is false. The BMP file format is is much more complex than I assumed. Next time i will try extracting the RAW data from the JPEG as described in the awesome Picamera documentation. Between 2018-01-31T22:07:53+00:00 and 2018-02-01T00:07:37+00:00 I then finally started recording.

moon1517436473.bmp: The first image

Well, the images are generally too red and blurry. I tried to correct this during post-processing.

Post-processing

First I manually removed distorted and extremely blurry images. Leaving me with 139, worth 3.2 GiB of data. hugin then assembled the panorama below. Again, everything on default parameters with a 20° field of view.

Assembling the Moon in hugin

The unprocessed panorama

The result is still red and blurry. This is why I then applied the following transformations in gimp:

Desaturate Average strategy Adjust brightness and contrast Brightness: -60

Contrast: 60 Despeckle Adaptive

Recursive

Black level: -1

White level: 256 Sharpen Sharpness: 50

The processed image

Final Thoughts

Compared to the imagery on wikimedia mine is a child’s drawing. But it’s mine! I am happy with the result because I was able to identify a lot of things to improve and test: