-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Thursday, 2017-12-28 at 19:15 +0100, Daniel Bauer wrote:
Am 28.12.2017 um 11:25 schrieb Carlos E. R.:
Hi,
I have a bunch of sky photos with stars and some shooting stars (of 639 photos taken, 13 contain shooting stars, Geminids). I have seen photographs compossed of automatically joining several such photos so that you see one photo with a dozen(s) shooting stars.
How can I do that, in Linux?
(If not in Linux, then Windows)
The application I understand superposes several photos matching the stars one on top of the other (as dots) and the landscape, and then the shooting stars are seen as several lines.
Maybe this could be something? http://www.markus-enzweiler.de/StarStaX/StarStaX.html
Yes, that could be the easiest.
for win, I guess...
Sigh... I also denoised the photos in Windows. There I just click "astronomical noise": <http://susepaste.org/30413399> I supposse that's doable in Linux, but there are so many manual configurations that it baffles me what to do. Besides, the Windows program knows exactly my camera. - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. (from openSUSE 42.2 x86_64 "Malachite" at Telcontar) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iEYEARECAAYFAlpFVcMACgkQtTMYHG2NR9WDtACeIbKFD7wnJP8TipxfvIFUQ4Ch Y5EAnijNcQesegKG1Hf3XWqoRMJ+Yau0 =sNpG -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org