I use my own eyes -- I look at them so that they are like 3-D images merged, one seen with my left eye, the other with my right. If anything moves against the background it pops out "above" the stars. Or if I switch the pics so that I'm looking at them with other eyes, then the moving objects pop "behind" the plane of the others. It makes it simple to detect any movement, just by searching for a 3-D effect. It only works if you have the ability to let two pics sort of slide on top of each other with your eyes, as if you are staring at something beyond the computer screen. Best wishes, Joe On Dec 3, 2007, at 2:32 PM, Patrick Wiggins wrote:
Sorry Joe, but while I do see a number of artifacts and ghost images I don't see any other MPs other than the ones we already know are there.
Are the objects you see moving in a straight line?
Are you viewing the images in quick succession with a blink comparator?
Do you have some way of posting an image with the objects highlighted?
As for other pictures, the file I posted contained all the pictures I took that evening.
patrick
On 03 Dec 2007, at 10:31, Joe Bauman wrote:
I can see definite movement between pics 11 and 19. I have trouble seeing the same thing with some later views, maybe because of changes in the sky's brightness or something moved off the frame, or maybe there were artifacts in the first place. But I tried to eliminate what I considered were artifacts, that is, small bright places where there were because of cosmic rays or blips on the chip. Do you have any shots in the 20s? Thanks, Joe
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