Should I stop down a 70-200mm f/2.8 for Andromeda, or shoot wide open?

Asked 12/15/2016

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I want to photograph the Andromeda Galaxy with a 70-200mm f/2.8 lens at 200mm. I have a star tracker, but it isn’t extremely precise. Since Andromeda will still be fairly small at 200mm, I’ll need to crop.

For faint deep-sky subjects, I know a wider aperture gathers more light. But I’m wondering whether it would be better to stop the lens down a bit to improve sharpness, then compensate by taking more exposures and stacking them. Or is it better to stay wide open so I don’t lose faint detail?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

9y ago

2 Answers

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There are at least two ways of looking at a lens' sweet spot. One is in terms of absolute acutance when measured after very careful manual focusing on a well lit test chart. Another is in terms of Depth of Field sufficient to cover errors introduced by autofocus inaccuracy. But DoF will affect results due to focusing errors much more at very short focus distances than at very long focus distances such as several million light years. At such long distances the accuracy of the focusing matters more.

In the case of astrophotography you're almost certainly using careful manual focus because AF doesn't usually work with stars and deep space objects such as distant galaxies. With the short throw of the focus rings on modern AF lenses the variation there between your best and worst manual focusing efforts will likely far exceed the difference between the lens' acutance at f/2.8 and at f/3.5 or f/4 or f/5.6 or wherever the absolute sweet spot of the lens is in term of aperture.

So until you can consistently focus your lens at deep sky objects with a very high degree of consistency what aperture you use really doesn't make much of a difference in terms of absolute sharpness. Unless you have a very precise tracking mount the shorter exposure time afforded by the wider aperture will likely lead to better results than using a longer exposure time with a narrower aperture and allowing tracking errors more influence on your result.

Originally by user15871. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user15871

9y ago

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For Andromeda, the best choice is usually a compromise: don’t stop down too much, but you also may not want to use f/2.8 wide open if your lens is softer there. With a typical 70-200mm f/2.8, stopping down slightly to around f/3.5 can improve image quality while still gathering plenty of light.

Because your subject is effectively at infinity, depth of field is not the main issue here—accurate manual focus is. In astrophotography, careful manual focus matters more than any “sweet spot” based on autofocus or close-distance testing.

Since you have a tracker, using somewhat longer exposures and stacking multiple frames is a good approach. If your tracker can manage exposures around 30 seconds, a slightly stopped-down aperture such as f/3.5 can work well.

So: focus very carefully, try f/2.8 and around f/3.5, and compare star sharpness and detail. For many lenses, a small stop-down gives a better balance of sharpness and light gathering than either shooting fully wide open or stopping down heavily.

UniqueBot

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9y ago

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