Last Sunday I used KStars and INDI during the total Lunar Eclipse to capture images of the Moon every 30 seconds. I used a ZWO ASI 224 one shot color camera with an 85 mm Rokinon lens strapped onto a Meade LXD55 Telescope Mount tracking at the Lunar rate. I had a Raspberry Pi strapped to the side that the camera and mount were plugged into. This was at a public outreach event so there were other club members providing the public with views through scopes and binoculars. I had My MacBook Pro inside the facility and connected to a projector so that people could look at the eclipse visually outside and then come inside to warm up, but still continue to see images of the eclipse captured every 30 seconds. (It was VERY cold outside)
KStars was very helpful here because all I had to do was take the mount outside, roughly point the mount toward Polaris, turn everything on, and then focus the camera. Then I could run inside to escape the cold. I then did two plate solves, slewed to the moon, and it was right in the center so I set the mount to track at the Lunar rate and started my sequence. Somehow, nobody bumped my mount the entire evening and I got plenty of data. I then saw how good it was coming out with numerous stars behind the eclipsed moon and I decided to keep all the images and turn them into a movie with the moon moving across the starry background. I think the movie came out fairly good. It is here:
www.facebook.com/rlancaste/videos/10100475972539184/
Then I had the thought (thanks to a friend's suggestion) that I could stack the 130 images during totality to enhance the moon. When I did so, it definitely helped but also produced another effect, which I had not thought about capturing, but definitely like in retrospect. It trailed the stars nicely producing a cool image of the moon zooming amongst the stars in the 1 hour timespan that it was in the Earth's shadow. Usually trailed stars are a sign of a mount failure in astrophotography unless you are trying to image star trails.
. But in this case, the effect is rather striking. I used the stacked image to enhance the movie a bit, but I also processed it in its own right.
I processed the images using a combination of PixInsight and Luminar. I processed the movie using PixInsight, Luminar, and iMovie.
Thanks and I hope you enjoy it as I did.
Rob