Crescents in April 2025

Young crescent on 28. April

The crescent was quite easy at 9° elongation, so i played with some features of the Crescent Viewer software to create a kind of demo. I used a simple 80/600 ED refractor telescope with a simple affle system and deep-red filter.

Standard features

Raw view
Raw view of a stack of 180 images, from one of the automatically saved FITS files. Contrast is very low, of course, as we are close to the sun.

Raw view, some more contrast
Adding some more contrast stretching in the FITS viewer. There is a crescent there, but we also see various dust shadows and a horizontal pattern and of course the structures of some high-altitude clouds so close to the sun.

Live view in the software
This is the live-view the software shows for the situation above. Most technical issues are gone, the contrast is dramatically improved and the crescent is easy to see. The user does NOT need to adjust many settings to get this, just capture some proper calibration data (which can be reused) and choose a Processing Mode.

Experimental improvements

Some more improvements are in the works and are being tested...

Search and mark the crescent
The software can automatically search for and mark the crescent in the image. This was a very easy case, of course.


Search and mark the crescent
This search-and-mark often still works if some disturbances such as contrails move through...

Search and mark the crescent
This was the raw stack of the image above with the contrails and some simple contrast stretching. NOT so easy to see without the special methods...


Drift stacked
The crescent search also allows align on the moving crescent and thus stack far more images. This might make very faint crescents visible, but this is not a good example of that.