NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Digital camera: stars in daylight
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2010 Sep 11, 17:20 +0100
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2010 Sep 11, 17:20 +0100
Frank wrote- " suppose we replace the eye with a camera. Now Venus is easy every time. With a decent camera and the right settings, how many stars and planets can you see in daylight? Jupiter? Yes. Sirius? Probably. How about Vega, Arcturus, Capella...? How faint can you go? If the number of visible stars averages more than three at a time, that completely changes the name of the game. Imagine getting three-star fixes all day long." Is Frank, here, discussing what's presently possible, in a navigational context, from the deck of a vessel, in ordinary sea-conditions? Is he claiming that daylight shots are possible, in such conditions, that show such stars or planets when at a respectable altitude, with a clear horizon below in the same shot? With angular accuracy and resolution of, say, a (very) few arc-minutes, in the angle between them? In ordinary, clear-sky, weather, with no special requirement for extraordinary crystal-clarity of the sky? If so, then he is right, that a useful tool is becoming available. But if not, before being carried away with enthusiasm, it would be worth considering any such limitations in terms of the restrictions they impose on its use, for a navigational purpose. ======================== I agree with Frank's assessment of the calibration of lens / array geometry, when applied to a non-zoom infinity-focussed system. A lens will, in general, be axially symmetrical, in an (r, theta) plot, and the only thing that really matters for astro is the plot of off-axis image angle against off-centre pixel radius. However, this differs from the way that lens distortions usually seem to be expressed, as a plot of off-centre radial displacement on a distant plane object, against displacement from the centre of the pixel array. Those two plots differ by a factor of exactly tan (angle), which should be easy to allow for. Being axially antisymmetric in an (x,y) plot, it can involve only odd powers of pixel off-centre displacement. But, to use such a camera for our astro purposes calls for highly accurate calibration, perhaps more accurate than the camera maker ever envisaged. Although the maker's calibration curve might well be sufficient in terms of its shape, if the aim is to even approach the precision of a sextant, it's likely to be necessary to calibrate the overall scale-factor of each individual instrument. Even if the pixel array is exactly uniform, is the array pich exactly the same in x and y directions? Is the lens-to-array spacing exactly reproducible, between cameras? Here, we're seeking an exactness of one part in many thousands. And as temperatures change, does that spacing change exactly in proportion to dimensions of the array itself? These are matters which over many years have been though about, and dealt with, in the case of the sextant, but may never have even been considered seriously for common usage of a camera. But such a calibration should not be difficult to make A single shot of a night-sky image should provide all that's needed. George. contact George Huxtable, at george@hux.me.uk or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222) or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK. =================== ----- Original Message ----- From: "Frank Reed"To: Sent: Saturday, September 11, 2010 12:12 PM Subject: [NavList] Digital camera: stars in daylight Paul Jackson's daytime Venus observations reminded me of a topic I meant to bring up back in July. Finding Venus by eye in daylight is a real challenge. Without a pre-set sextant or a mounted telescope, you can stare right at it for minutes and never "see" it. But suppose we replace the eye with a camera. Now Venus is easy every time. With a decent camera and the right settings, how many stars and planets can you see in daylight? Jupiter? Yes. Sirius? Probably. How about Vega, Arcturus, Capella...? How faint can you go? If the number of visible stars averages more than three at a time, that completely changes the name of the game. Imagine getting three-star fixes all day long... In order to be useful, this would require some sort of software that can scan through an image looking for the "little white dot". That's easy enough in principle. Does that software exist anywhere? This would probably require analyzing "raw" image files rather than compressed jpegs, but most mid-range "prosumer" digital SLRs can output those easily. By the way, a few months ago when I did not have much time for NavList, there was another running discussion of camera calibration. I think it might be worth noting that is a solved problem. People have been making highly accurate angular measurements with digital cameras for over a decade. You can even use a fisheye lens and still get accurate angles from the images. This is not rocket science. The trouble, from the perspective of a navigation enthusiast, is that these "well-known" algorithms are generally deeply buried in various software tools, from standalone products to photoshop plug-ins. The tools will spit out a calibration matrix (or a set of coefficients) when fed a series of standardized calibration images like photos of a checkerboard in various orientations, but if you want to do it yourself, you'll probably have to dig through the original technical literature. Some useful search terms: "camera calibration" (but that also includes things like color calibration), "camera resectioning", "photogrammetry" and "digital photogrammetry" (this is the process of producing 3d models from a series of photos taken from various angles --one-tenth of a minute of arc accuracy was considered reasonable even seven or eight years ago), and "amateur astrometry" (professional-quality astrometric results have been possible with mid-range digital cameras and backyard telescopes for over a decade). The problem of calibration for celestial navigation involves large angles and a very small number of objects all at effectively infinite distance visible at any one time. This problem falls somewhere in between the photogrammetry problem (which deals with objects in a wide field of view at various distances from the camera while celestial deals only with objects at infinity) and the astrometric problem (which usually depends on field stars with known angular positions in a smaller field of view).