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Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Coronado SolarMax II 60 NexImage Registax Panoramic

Creating a full-disk solar panorama is not always straightforward when using a dedicated solar telescope and a CCD camera. With the Coronado SolarMax II 60 and NexImage CCD, the apparent solar disk can be too large to fit into a single frame at native resolution.

Instead of reducing magnification or sacrificing detail, I decided to apply a classical astrophotography solution: build a panoramic mosaic of the Sun.

The idea is simple in principle but requires careful planning in practice:

  • Record multiple overlapping solar segments (in this case – three videos).
  • Keep identical exposure, gain, and duration settings for each capture.
  • Process all videos using the same stacking parameters in RegiStax.
  • Export uniformly sharpened frames.
  • Merge them using Photoshop → File → Automate → Photomerge.

Consistency is critical. If video duration, histogram levels, or wavelet sharpening differ between segments, the final mosaic will show visible seams. Proper overlap between frames is also essential to allow accurate alignment of solar features such as filaments and prominences.

This workflow is very similar to techniques used in:

  • Nightscape panoramas (for example, multi-frame Milky Way images)
  • Large-field “Rainbow Milky Way” mosaics
  • Deep-sky mosaics when a single frame cannot capture the entire object

Solar mosaics require the same discipline — but with an additional challenge: the Sun evolves quickly. Prominences and surface detail can subtly change during capture, so recording segments efficiently is important.

The final result below demonstrates how three stacked segments were combined into a seamless panoramic solar image.


Solar panoramic mosaic created from three stacked videos using Coronado SolarMax II 60 and NexImage CCD
Coronado SolarMax II 60 NexImage, Registax, Final Panoramic 3 images, Astrophotography


This example shows that even with a compact solar setup, it is possible to produce high-resolution full-disk results by applying classical astrophotography mosaic techniques.


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