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The Basics of Registax 6

The Basics of Registax 6. David O’Dell Anderson High School Austin, TX. 3 Main Features. Preferably done in this order: Alignment – does what you think it does Stack – vertically stacks all the images you align into a one single image

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The Basics of Registax 6

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  1. The Basics of Registax 6 David O’Dell Anderson High School Austin, TX

  2. 3 Main Features • Preferably done in this order: • Alignment – does what you think it does • Stack – vertically stacks all the images you align into a one single image • Wavelets – image sharpening, color enhancement, denoise

  3. 3 - Wavelet 2 - Stack 1 - Align

  4. Frames of your video • Your video is divided into many individual frames • Most planetary imaging requires several hundred, perhaps around 200-400 • More frames don’t always mean a better image

  5. Click Select, Find a video file

  6. Reference image • A reference frame is what you decide to be the best looking image in your video • Using the frame slider at the bottom, choose a frame you feel is one of the best images

  7. Frame Slider

  8. First step: Alignment • Alignment must be done because your video file always shows some wobble or interference due to: • Wind blowing against the telescope • Birds or airplanes flying over head • Accidental touching or bumping the telescope • Clicking the left mouse button on the image displays a little red dot, this is an alignment point

  9. Alignment points • Alignment points are used to align all the images based on your chosen reference image • Registax can do this automatically, or you can do it manually, depending on how large the planet appears in your video • Small planet images may require you to set your own alignment points

  10. Goal of alignment points • You want: • Several but not an insane amount of them • To stay away from the edges of very bright and very dark areas • Be inside the planet / object, not around it • Large planets, around 20-30 • Small planets you might only have 5-10

  11. Set Alignment points, then click ALIGN

  12. Limit the number of frames • You will never use ALL of your frames, you don’t want to • You only want the best of the best frames • You must limit the amount in the limit setting

  13. Select the BEST FRAMES %, Use around 70 – 90%, then click LIMIT

  14. Stacking process • Probably the easiest once you have everything else done • The default values are fine • Just click STACK!

  15. Leave values as they are, Click STACK

  16. Save your raw data after you stack

  17. On to the Wavelets for sharpening • Experiment with the various sliders one at a time, starting with Layer 1 • You can adjust brightness / contrast and lots of different color adjustments in this section

  18. Adjust the various sliders to increase sharpness

  19. After adjusting • Once you finish adjustments click DO ALL • If you don’t like what you see, readjust and click DO ALL again • If you want to restack, click the STACK tab and repeat the process • After everything, click SAVE IMAGE and show it off!

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