Bazsites.com Astrophotography And Ccd Imaging
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Ray Gralak's CCD Images - Images with various cameras, and hydrogen alpha CCD images.
- Al Kelly's CCD Astrophotography Page - Galleries of astronomical images and basic instruction manual for acquiring and processing CCD images.
- CCD Imaging and Astrophotography - Astronomical images taken with various cameras with information for telescope and equipment.
- Imaging the Deep Sky - Film and CCD images, equipment details, image processing, and dark room processing.
- Steve Stefanik - Amateur Astronomer - Film and CCD images, monthly celestial events, and CCD image processing tutorial.
- Astro Imaging - Astronomical image gallery, equipment and articles.
- Small Scope Images - Images of galaxies, nebula, clusters, lunar, planets, and comets taken with CCD and conventional cameras
- Astronomy CCD Images - Archive of astronomical images and resources.
- Dan's CCD Imaging Page - Astronomical images.
- Al Legary's CCD Cookbook Imaging - Gallery of images using Cookbook cb245 camera.
Wikipedia Articles
- Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer - ACIS, the AXAF CCD Imaging Spectrometer, is an instrument built by a team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Center for Space Research and the Pennsylvania State University for the Chandra X-ray Observatory (formerly, AXAF)
- Three-CCD - Three-CCD or 3CCD is a term used to describe an imaging system employed by some still cameras, video cameras, telecine and camcorders. Three-CCD cameras have three separate charge-coupled devices (CCDs), each one taking a separate measurement of red, green, and blue light.
- Dark frame - A dark frame is a photography technique to identify noise in a CCD imaging device. This is done by recording without exposing the CCD, usually by leaving the shutter closed and putting the CCD in a dark room.
- Sony CCD-VX3 - Sony 3CCD-VX3 (often referred to as simply VX-3) was a Hi-8 camcorder noteworthy for being the first to feature dichroic (prismatic) imaging. It was released to the North American market in 1993 at a street cost of about US$3500.
- Single-lens reflex camera - The single-lens reflex (SLR) camera is a photographic imaging instrument that currently uses an automatic moving mirror system and viewing pentaprism, which is situated between the lens and the film plane to direct the light reflected from the subject's image, then passing through the attached lens, with the light being reflected by the 45 degree angle ... then be composed by the photographer; the focus can be adjusted manually (or automatically) by either the photographer (or the autofocus system if the camera is thus equipped); and then the photographer can release the shutter, thereby exposing the film (or, in the case of a DSLR, the CCD or CMOS imaging sensor).