| An in depth look at 
							astrophotography has been left 
							to the dedicated section
							Astrophotography. This section briefly 
							introduces why we use photography in Astronomy.
 
							There are many important tools in Astronomy, but 
							nothing is more valuable than a camera - in the case 
							of the late 20th and beyond the 
							CCD is invaluable. 
							It all comes down to what our eyes can perceive. Our 
							eyes are great for day to day activity, but to 
							scrutinize faint object looking through a 
							telescope, 
							our eyes are the last choice. Our sensory retina is 
							just not designed for such tasks.  Gaseous appearance of nebula and 
							galaxies are 
							evident when viewing with the eye, but chances are 
							the image will be mono-chromatic - one color. The 
							larger the
							telescope, the discerning a particular 
							object may be, but the vivid color is just not 
							there. All of the pretty Hubble images or images in 
							magazines of celestial objects are captured via long 
							period exposures.  There are basically two methods of photography 
							today: 
							film and
							CCD. 
							Film based photography reigned 
							supreme in regards to field of view. The 
							CCD chips 
							in the early days covered may a few degrees of sky 
							at one time while plate
							film covered as much as 14 
							degrees at one time. As
							CCD's grew larger, cheaper, 
							and better, 
							CCD's have proven to be the workhorse 
							for 
							astrophotography. The reasons are simple: 
								
								CCD's (Charged Coupled Devices) are linear 
								in response - meaning that twice the exposure 
								means twice the signal; 
								film is notThere are no chemicals required
								CCD image is ready almost immediately, 
								film 
								must be developed (and sometimes the image may 
								not be what was intended)
								CCD's store numerical data so numerous data 
								analysis can be performed without damage to the 
								original; 
								film could be scanned, but that uses 
								pricey drum scanners 
							CCD's are not without their share of problems - 
							computer error, heat, noise - but most of these 
							errors can be removed by 
							data reduction methods. The
							Astrophotography Advanced Topics has a project 
							paper I wrote that uses these 
							data reduction 
							techniques. 
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