Astro Imagers Special Interest Group
The AISIG is a group within the SDAA devoted to imaging the sky and helping others to take astro-images. This “sport” is growing rapidly with theadvent of more capable and accessable electronic camers. In addition, astro-imaging is a fascinating way to observe since we can capture fainter details than are possible with the unaided eye. Of course, there are recorded images to process, save, share and compare. AISIG members have a wide range of imaging interests – landscape and sky, solar, wide field night sky, planetary, deep space, narrow band imaging – and use imaging tools that range from cell phones, to web cameras, to Digital SLRs, to specialized CCD cameras. Similarly, our experience level goes from beginner to some of the most accomplished imagers on the West Coast.
If you are an imager or are interested in learning about astro-imaging, you are invited to attend our regular meetings or ask any of the members for advice or help. Our regular meetings are on the fourth Wednesday of the month at Mission Trails Regional Park in the Visitor Center. Contact the AISIG Chairman for further information.
We support both beginning and more advanced astro-imagers. We have an exciting group within the AISIG that is working with data from the 24-inch remotely controlled Light Buckets telescopes in New Mexico.
Please view some of our work on the AISIG Gallery on Astrobin or Flickr
Join us in discussion at the AISIG Groups.io Group.
Caught on DVD |
Previous lectures on Astro-imaging available on DVD. Contact the AISIG Chairman to borrow a DVD. |
Jeff Lunglhofer (03/26/08) | Imaging Equipment, Control Software and Image Processing |
Dave Goodin (04/28/08) | Image Processing |
Peter Morrison (05/28/08) | WebCam Imaging |
Terry Arnold (08/27/08) | CCD Imaging |
Jeff Lunglehofer (10/22/08) | Astro-Imaging Primer, part II |
Terry Arnold (07/22/09) | Image Calibration Work Flow in Maxim DL Pro |
Caught on DVD (now on the web!) |
Jeff Lunglhofer’s Astro Imaging Primer (Download documentation for this video here) |
Dave Goodin on Image Processing |