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  • 00:00

    Hello everybody and welcome to my thoughts on a brand new telescope for amateur astronomers

  • 00:06

    that was released by Vaonis, a French company that has done something remarkable with the

  • 00:11

    Stellina telescope, they’ve created a fully-automated, self-contained optical system that is unlike

  • 00:19

    anything I’ve seen before.

  • 00:21

    This telescope is a real paradigm shift for amateur astronomy, never before has getting

  • 00:26

    into the hobby been easier.

  • 00:28

    Vaonis sent me this unit to play with for a few weeks and I’ve spent a lot of time

  • 00:32

    with it, to be blunt, this is the funnest telescope I’ve ever used - I actually want

  • 00:38

    to take this outside and see stuff with it.

  • 00:41

    In this video, I’m going to give you my thoughts and experiences with the scope, but

  • 00:45

    it’s so easy to use, I’m not going to go into great detail on how to use it and

  • 00:49

    stuff like that - because well, I don’t have to - it really is plug and play simple.

  • 00:54

    To use it, all you have to do is level the tripod, turn it on and connect with the telescope

  • 01:00

    via the Stellinapp for your smartphone.

  • 01:03

    That’s literally all you gotta do to get started using it, it’s that simple.

  • 01:09

    But, if you want more examples and a more complete description than what I’ll give

  • 01:17

    here, please watch the video that Galactic-Hunters made on stellina, they’ve done an outstanding

  • 01:22

    job introducing the Stellina Telescope so I’m going to give a different perspective.

  • 01:28

    The link to their video is in the description box and that is also a channel well worth

  • 01:32

    subbing to if you think you’re going to get into astro imaging in a big way.

  • 01:36

    So when I got the scope, the first thing I noticed was that there was no eyepiece, this

  • 01:44

    is strictly an imaging scope, which depending on your outlook is either a good or a bad

  • 01:49

    thing.

  • 01:50

    I put the battery in and downloaded the app from the Google Play store, then I turned

  • 01:54

    it on.

  • 01:56

    The startup process boots up the telescope and starts a wifi hotspot that you’ll connect

  • 02:01

    to with your phone.

  • 02:02

    The only tricky thing to remember is that when you’re connecting to the wifi of the

  • 02:08

    Stellina, turn off your data connection to your cell provider because otherwise the phone

  • 02:14

    won’t fully connect.

  • 02:19

    You won’t be able to surf the web from the telescope’s hotspot, only connect to it

  • 02:25

    so you can control it.

  • 02:28

    Alright, so with those preliminaries out of the way, which I did indoors, I was ready

  • 02:35

    to go outside.

  • 02:36

    Here is how I used the scope, I just put it on the tailgate of my truck.

  • 02:40

    It was easy and the tailgate is at a comfortable height and allowed me to drive anywhere I

  • 02:46

    wanted easy and setup fast.

  • 02:49

    And man is this scope easy to use.

  • 02:52

    I’m not overstating it when I say that this telescope is the easiest and most fool-proof

  • 02:57

    telescope I’ve ever used.

  • 03:01

    Ever.

  • 03:02

    Any night I wanted to go out, all I had to do was grab it and in less than 10 minutes

  • 03:05

    I was imaging something.

  • 03:08

    What a satisfying experience that was because anyone who owns a large, heavy, complicated

  • 03:13

    telescope system will tell you that deciding whether you want to schlep all that stuff

  • 03:18

    outside, polar align it, boot up computers and cameras and grab eyepieces and all that

  • 03:24

    jazz isn’t all that easy.

  • 03:30

    Sometimes you just say, ‘well, maybe I’ll stay inside tonight’.

  • 03:36

    Unless you have a permanent setup where you can just go outside and turn things on, you’re

  • 03:43

    not always keen on getting all that gear out on a cold night.

  • 03:47

    I promise you won’t do that with this scope.

  • 03:50

    Ten minutes from decision to imaging will make all the difference in whether you go

  • 03:56

    out under the stars or not.

  • 03:57

    So here are some of the specs: this is an f/5 system that is a composite refractor/reflector

  • 04:03

    design that has a Nasmyth focus meaning the image plane comes out the side of the optical

  • 04:09

    tube.

  • 04:10

    The objective lens is an apochromatic ED doublet made from lanthanum glass and it has anti-reflection

  • 04:15

    coatings.

  • 04:16

    The camera is based on a 6.4 MP Sony CMOS chip that has 3096 x 2080 pixels and because

  • 04:23

    it is sitting on an alt-az mount, it has an optical field derotator built in and since

  • 04:29

    I live in Florida, one thing I appreciated was that it also has a built-in dew control

  • 04:34

    heater.

  • 04:37

    So basically, this thing has everything you’re going to need to get started imaging objects

  • 04:41

    in space.

  • 04:42

    You won’t need to buy anything else.

  • 04:44

    Actually, I don’t think you can buy anything else for it, where are you gonna put it?

  • 04:56

    But even with all that sophisticated mechanical, electronic and optical components, what really

  • 05:02

    sets this telescope apart in my opinion, is the onboard control and imaging software - the

  • 05:08

    software is the hidden treasure here.

  • 05:11

    What advanced imagers learn the hard way is that taking a good image is tricky, you need

  • 05:16

    to have good alignment with the sky, great focus and your processing after the fact needs

  • 05:24

    to be great before you get an image that looks halfway decent.

  • 05:27

    All of that really tricky stuff is dealt with in Stellina.

  • 05:31

    After it boots up and starts the wifi network, it begins a series of tasks that are not trivial,

  • 05:37

    but it seems that way because of how they’ve implemented it: it looks up and immediately

  • 05:42

    starts focusing by implementing an onboard focusing routine, then it does a plate solution

  • 05:47

    to figure out where it is on Earth and where it’s looking in the sky (it has an onboard

  • 05:54

    GPS too).

  • 05:55

    This takes several minutes to complete but that simplicity belies a lot of hard work

  • 06:01

    in software control and design that I don’t think beginners can fully appreciate.

  • 06:07

    This little telescope has the same sophistication in software that you would only find in professional

  • 06:14

    observatories.

  • 06:15

    I know this because I’ve written that code in my previous life and it’s one of the

  • 06:20

    things that impressed me the most with Stellina.

  • 06:23

    This is a complete remote observing unit where you don’t need to touch it once it’s started.

  • 07:12

    Now we’re ready to start looking at stuff.

  • 07:15

    The app is where you’ll search for what’s up right now and gives an estimate of how

  • 07:21

    long you should observe to get a decent image.

  • 07:24

    I picked several of my favorites starting with M57 the Ring Nebula.

  • 07:33

    This is where my jaw started dropping.

  • 07:36

    What happens after you tell Stellina to look at something is revolutionary and why I think

  • 07:41

    this telescope is a game-changer: it slews to the object, focuses for a bit more and

  • 07:46

    then begins to take a series of images that will appear on your cell phone.

  • 07:51

    For most objects I looked at with Stellina, it took 8-15 second exposures and started

  • 07:57

    adding them all up together.

  • 08:00

    This is something professional astronomers and imagers do routinely: they make a bright

  • 08:05

    image of a dim object like a galaxy or nebula by adding together successive, short exposure

  • 08:12

    images together.

  • 08:13

    This increases signal and reduces noise, and what you get is a remarkably detailed image

  • 08:19

    made from shorter exposure images.

  • 08:23

    Using the app, you can scroll through the stack of images you’ve taken as it goes

  • 08:27

    along.

  • 08:29

    Each image in the stack is exposed, dark subtracted, enhanced then added to the stack.

  • 08:37

    But here is where they’ve hidden another really advanced feature in the software: over

  • 08:44

    the course of the 20 minutes or so I was imaging the Ring Nebula, clouds would periodically

  • 08:49

    cover the object.

  • 08:51

    Those frames never made it into the final image which tells me that there is an algorithm

  • 08:56

    running that gives an idea of the image quality and throws out the bad ones.

  • 09:03

    Otherwise, one cloudy frame added to the stack would ruin the final image.

  • 09:08

    As a software engineer, I’d love to see that algorithm because it did a really good

  • 09:11

    job, again rivalling what I’ve seen in professional data pipelines.

  • 09:16

    I also took some images of the Andromeda Galaxy and the Orion Nebula, here’s my image of

  • 09:22

    the Double Cluster in Perseus and a quick shot of the Moon.

  • 09:27

    The time I had with the scope saw a lot of cloudy nights, but I managed this really cool

  • 09:32

    image of the Crab Nebula.

  • 09:35

    And this image of the Crab Nebula brings me to why I think this telescope may be the future

  • 09:44

    of amateur astronomy - but isn’t necessarily the future of astrophotography.

  • 09:49

    Let me explain.

  • 09:51

    Many of you that are advanced astro-imagers have already expressed the opinion that you

  • 09:55

    can get way better imaging setups for that this telescope costs you and that it will

  • 10:02

    never replace a truly dedicated system designed for taking high resolution, long exposure

  • 10:08

    astro photos.

  • 10:10

    I see your point, but I would argue some of the details, I mean granted at $4000 this

  • 10:17

    thing ain’t cheap, but it’s comparable to what you’d spend on a high quality imaging

  • 10:22

    station that included a 6MP chip, field derotator, lens dew control system, control and processing

  • 10:30

    software and all the other stuff the Stellina has.

  • 10:35

    By the time you’ve spent money on all that stuff, you’re still looking at a similar

  • 10:40

    price point although you might get a 102mm objective and a better mount - maybe.

  • 10:51

    But I’ll concede that point for the moment and just say that this telescope may not be

  • 10:55

    future of astrophotography, but it most DEFINITELY is the future of observing.

  • 11:02

    If I were manufacturers of eyepieces, I’d be a little worried about the Stellina.

  • 11:06

    I love you TeleVue, I really do, but there are storms on the horizon.

  • 11:13

    Why?

  • 11:14

    Everyone knows we are losing our night skies.

  • 11:17

    They are dying a slow death.

  • 11:20

    Very few people have ever seen the Milky Way much less a planet or the Andromeda galaxy

  • 11:24

    on a clear, dark night.

  • 11:27

    Too many people can’t even see all the stars in the Big Dipper

  • 11:33

    I predict that in most places in the world, visual observing through an eyepiece will

  • 11:38

    be a dead hobby in my lifetime.

  • 11:41

    And I’m old.

  • 11:45

    What this telescope represents is the future of visual astronomy.

  • 11:50

    With our disappearing night sky and lack of good observing sites, this telescope is the

  • 11:55

    replacement of the eyepiece.

  • 12:00

    I am a visual astronomer at heart, I love looking through an eyepiece but even during

  • 12:06

    the best of times, with dark skies and no moon, all I ever really saw were colorful

  • 12:11

    smudges at best and faint incoherent smudges at worst.

  • 12:17

    And try as I might, throughout my whole life of living, I never saw the Crab Nebula anywhere

  • 12:24

    near like this!

  • 12:27

    To get even a small hint of color from an eyepiece on this object, I’d need a 20 inch

  • 12:32

    scope minimum, preferably a 30 inch or larger and that’s just not practical for casual

  • 12:40

    amateurs.

  • 12:41

    Here, with an 80mm scope and ten minutes of my time under light-polluted, partly cloudy

  • 12:46

    skies I can see this?

  • 12:49

    I’m sorry but nothing in all my years of observing using an eyepiece have I seen anything

  • 12:54

    as exciting.

  • 12:56

    This image was taken almost directly under a street light on my property and the clouds

  • 13:00

    were all over the place.

  • 13:02

    After about 30 minutes, I stopped imaging because it was gonna start raining.

  • 13:14

    So no, this probably won’t replace serious astrophotography, but I gotta say it’s gonna

  • 13:21

    come close, these images are pretty damned good and if you get one of these and decide

  • 13:26

    to get serious later, you can attach a thumb drive to the usb port in here and you can

  • 13:32

    save the raw fits images yourself for further processing or analysis if you’re doing science

  • 13:39

    with it.

  • 13:41

    Here’s another part of the hobby that will forever be changed by this scope: star parties.

  • 13:49

    Stellina will connect with up to 20 other smartphones with the Stellinapp which means

  • 13:54

    that a large group can get the image themselves on their phones to do with whatever they want

  • 14:02

    with it.

  • 14:03

    Star parties will never be the same again.

  • 14:06

    Imagine watching an ever brightening Orion Nebula appearing on your smartphone, full

  • 14:12

    of color and detail, while sharing it with 20 other people all looking at the same thing.

  • 14:19

    That is an experience unique in amateur astronomy and may very well bring to an end the nights

  • 14:24

    at the eyepiece while heralding in an era of high detail casual observing behind the

  • 14:31

    small, high resolution screen of a smartphone.

  • 14:34

    Remember, this is coming from a guy who spent his life sitting behind $1500 eyepieces and

  • 14:40

    staring directly at objects whose photons where falling directly on my retina.

  • 14:46

    I always cherished that feeling of a direct connection with the cosmos.

  • 14:51

    But I’m a realist and I know those times are fading away, literally, with the onslaught

  • 14:57

    of light pollution.

  • 14:59

    This telescope, the stellina, is poised to take that place and improve on it.

  • 15:04

    I was surprised at how thrilled I was as the image progressed through the night, especially

  • 15:12

    objects that have always been challenging to see in an eyepiece, like the Crab Nebula.

  • 15:18

    I was just as excited seeing the image build up on my phone as I was looking through the

  • 15:23

    eyepiece.

  • 15:24

    Actually a little more so because of the detail I could see with so little effort.

  • 15:30

    Sharing to social media is a given in this day and age, and of course it’s trivial

  • 15:34

    to do that when the images start out on your phone.

  • 15:38

    Now for reasons I’ve never understood, some harumphing seasoned amateurs think of what

  • 15:43

    Stellina does as "cheating" but seriously, OK boomer (hey wait a minute, I’m a boomer

  • 15:51

    - OK me).

  • 15:53

    In my defense though, I’m on the tail-end of the boomer era, I’m barely a boomer.

  • 15:57

    These scopes are a real advance for amateur astronomy IMO, it’s as big a leap as the

  • 16:04

    arrival of the Schmidt-Cassegrain in the 70’s and the Dobsonian in the 80’s.

  • 16:09

    Beginners won't get the amazing results that seasoned amateurs get but it gets them in

  • 16:13

    the door really fast and in a way that keeps people who've never had a scope before engaged

  • 16:21

    in the hobby.

  • 16:22

    If there’s anything bad to say about this scope, it’s the price.

  • 16:26

    Four thousand dollars is a lot of money, and while an argument can be made that most hobbies

  • 16:30

    have a price point like this (motorcycling, bicycling, photography, stuff like that),

  • 16:41

    it’s still a lot to ask a beginner to spend.

  • 16:45

    I would say though, that while many beginners buy a smaller, cheaper scope that’s harder

  • 16:49

    to use and they don’t go out with it much, this scope you’ll use - I promise.

  • 16:55

    It’s easy, fun and capable of growing into advanced uses as your skills grow.

  • 17:03

    One other small problem that I see is that you can’t add any filters.

  • 17:08

    While the on board processing does an excellent job of getting rid of sky background noise,

  • 17:13

    to get the most from a telescope under lights, adding filters would be a nice-to-have, but

  • 17:21

    that’s not enough for me to say don’t get it.

  • 17:26

    If you live under street lights and have always wished you could see the beauty and wonder

  • 17:30

    that’s up there over our heads, deep in our universe - the Stellina Telescope will

  • 17:36

    open that door to you - even if you live directly under streetlights.

  • 17:41

    It is one of the best weapons that fight against the loss of one of our most precious treasures:

  • 17:48

    a dark, night sky full of stars.

  • 17:51

    While dark skies may forever be lost to the majority of us who don’t live under them,

  • 17:55

    we now have a tool that can pierce the curtain of light pollution and show us what lies behind.

  • 18:01

    I want to thank Vaonis for sending me this Stellina to play with, I promise I will one

  • 18:06

    day send it back (just kidding), you’ll get it by June, I promise - kidding!

  • 18:17

    If you want to support Deep Astronomy Content, please consider clicking on the link below

  • 18:21

    in the description box.

  • 18:22

    It’s an affiliate link to OPT Telescopes and anything you buy there benefits Deep Astronomy

  • 18:30

    and allows me to continue making content.

  • 18:34

    Thanks to all of you for watching and as always, Keep Looking Up!

All

The example sentences of IMAGERS in videos (1 in total of 1)

what wh-pronoun advanced verb, past tense imagers proper noun, singular learn verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner hard adjective way noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction taking verb, gerund or present participle a determiner good adjective image noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present tricky noun, singular or mass , you personal pronoun need verb, non-3rd person singular present

Definition and meaning of IMAGERS

What does "imagers mean?"

/ˈimijər/

noun
electronic or other device which records images of something.
other
Electronic devices that record images.