Hi Carole, Steve, and Ron ,
thank you so much for the very valuable feedback and the kind words!
I know that my set up is not the best for astrophotography, but I'm trying to pull the best out of it!
Yes Carole, I confess that I was a bit lazy about bad frames, I was more focused on getting as much signal to noise improvement as possible. I re-checked the light frames and you were right indeed, I found that 12-13 had visible star jumping (caused by what..that's a whole new story I guess!), and so with a "heavy heart", I removed them from the stack…I'm going to reprocess the remaining good ones.
Steve, in order to focus properly I have used the live view of the camera on the polar star at 10x. When it's on focus the double star is nicely resolved, I guess one could use Castor, it would be even better! As for field rotation I was aware that it is a severe limitation to astrophotography with alt-az mounts, and so 30 seconds exposure was my conservative estimation to prevent noticeable field rotation. I actually found the exact formula to calculate the angular speed rotation (
http://calgary.rasc.ca/field_rotation.htm). It depends on the azimuth and altitude of the object in the sky, on the latitude of the observer, and on the number of pixel in the sensor…it gets worse as the observer moves towards the poles and on objects high in the sky in the N ans S directions….so the rule of thumb is "stay away from north and south and point to an object low in the sky east or west". Depending on the position of the object you can image for as long as 1 or 2 minutes or even up to 4 before observing noticeable field rotation, perhaps next time I could do the actual math trying to extend my exposure.
Ron, looking at your gallery it's really reassuring about the potential of the cpc800…and you just gave me a great idea….I confess I was already thinking about getting a decent equatorial mount with a small apo refractor, but with the wedge and a piggyback refractor I can get the same result at half the price, especially if I stay on the second hand market….that's genius…And I get to keep the cpc800 for visual and planetary photography!
Thanks all again!