planetary-system-stacker 0.8.32~git20220325.ce638a8-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

planetary-system-stacker (0.8.32~git20220325.ce638a8-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New upstream release.
  * debian/watch: temporary hack to use git HEAD

 -- Thorsten Alteholz <email address hidden>  Wed, 03 Aug 2022 22:33:58 +0000

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Uploaded by:
Debian Astronomy Maintainers
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Astronomy Maintainers
Architectures:
all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Kinetic: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

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planetary-system-stacker_0.8.32~git20220325.ce638a8-1.dsc 2.4 KiB dbe5c36ffb469791173eef8200db3008bc3fcdc643a9e4561f961dcb52ba2bee
planetary-system-stacker_0.8.32~git20220325.ce638a8.orig.tar.xz 34.9 MiB 186ec9b5aaa529de636fa645bf17889ac3229c1745ced0868282936708c6824b
planetary-system-stacker_0.8.32~git20220325.ce638a8-1.debian.tar.xz 2.5 KiB f6ba25720983f4d19ff763150192ae9560b6d946f3836e4b2a7d2eb8aa525cdf

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Binary packages built by this source

planetary-system-stacker: create a sharp image of a planetary system object (moon, sun, planets)

 This package contrains software to produce a sharp image of a planetary
 system object (moon, sun, planets) from many seeing-affected frames using
 the "lucky imaging" technique._
 .
 The program is mainly targeted at extended objects (moon, sun), but it
 works as well for planets. Results obtained in many tests show at least
 the same image quality as with the established software AutoStakkert!3.
 .
 Input to the program can be either video files or directories containing
 still images. The following algorithmic steps are performed:
 .
  * First, all frames are ranked by their overall image quality.
  * On the best frame, a rectangular patch with the most pronounced structure
    in x and y is identified automatically. (Alternatively, the user can
    select the patch manually as well.)
  * Using this patch, all frames are aligned globally with each other.
  * A mean image is computed by averaging the best frames.
  * An alignment point mesh covering the object is constructed automatically.
    Points, where the image is too dim, or has too little contrast or structure,
    are discarded. The user can modify the alignment points, or set them all
    by hand as well.
  * For each alignment point, all frames are ranked by their local contrast
    in a surrounding image patch.
  * The best frames up to a given number are selected for stacking.
    Note that this list can be different for different points.
  * For all frames, local shifts are computed at all alignment points.
  * Using those shifts, the alignment point patches of all contributing
    frames are stacked into a single average image patch.
  * Finally, all stacked patches are blended into a global image, using the
    background image in places without alignment points.
  * After stacking is completed, the stacked image can be postprocessed
    (sharpened) either in a final step of the stacking workflow, or in a
    separate postprocessing job.