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by SamBam
770 days ago
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I believe that fancy astrophotography tripods already do that rotation for you, right? I think that for astrophotography, the shutter times are so long that you have to build it into the tripod, instead of relying on the tiny amount of stabilization that can be done in-camera. Although maybe it would be helpful to cancel out some motor noise of vibrations from the tripod. But probably the existing image stabilization already does this. |
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For the very long exposure times, you can also hook a second camera up and run closed loop control on a specific star to keep your primary image sensor trained on the correct target to even tighter tolerances. There's companies making cameras that combine both the primary and secondary camera into a single housing so you don't need to fit a second camera + lens to your setup, or insert a prism to pick off part of the image to go to a second camera.
Amateur astrophotography today does tricks you needed access to a dedicated lab to do in previous decades. It's amazing!