Usage Guidelines and Procedures For Sharpcap: Commonly Used Controls

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Usage guidelines and procedures for SharpCap

This document is meant to describe the features and configuration items of interest to our
project interior to the SharpCap camera control software.

Commonly used controls


Anything not discussed is generally not used for our experiment.

On Menu bar

File
See section on baseline settings for the “SharpCap Settings”.

Cameras
● Rescan for Cameras​ - If you do not see your camera listed below, unplug and plug back
in the USB cable at the computer and then click this. In the cameras section, you will
need to select the camera to begin using it. It will appear and be checked automatically
if everything is connected properly prior to starting the program.

Options
Nothing here is recommended.

Capture
Nothing here is recommended. The “Start Capture” item does not work the same as the tool bar
item of the same name. It immediately starts taking data with no chance to review what you are
about to do. The tool bar item is equivalent to “Quick Capture” which should be avoided.

Tools
Nothing here is recommended.

Scripting
Nothing here is recommended.

Help
● View Help​ - What the heck? Why not give it a try? Where do you think this document
came from…
● Check for Updates​ - Do not use this. Check the bottom of this document for our
procedure on how to upgrade the software.
● About… - You can get the current version of the software here.

On top tool bar


● Start Capture​ - use this to take data. It will pop-up a window where you can specify the
number of frames to take, or, the amount of time to collect data at the current frame rate.
● Zoom​ - Auto shows the full frame but it has to scale the image down to get it to fit. The
other useful option is to use 100% so you see an unscaled portion of the image and can
scroll around as needed.
● Image Histogram​ - (this is just an icon button on the right). This opens a plot window
showing a histogram of the portion of the image in the red box seen in the smaller
minified version of the image being read. This is handy to assess the sky background
level and any saturation. The tool tip that appears when hovering over the icon is “Show
the Image Histogram”.
● Focus Assistant​ - (right-most icon, red magnifying glass). When you click on this, a
dropdown list appears: select FWHM Measurement. This opens a plot window that
shows a running stream of FWHM (in pixels) for the star that is in the red region of
interest. The region can be generously sized but make sure the star is not saturated and
the background is black, or nearly so. Usually while focusing, you want the offset set to
zero.
● Reticule/Graticule -​ toggles either a bullseye or X overlay and is useful for centering or
collimation.

Camera Control Panel

Capture Profiles
● There is a pre-defined standard profile called “OCC” that we set up to use the expected
settings desired for the June 3 occultation opportunities. Select “OCC” from the
drop-down, then click “LOAD”. This will do a lot of things including turning on the
detector cooling.

Capture Format and Area


All of these parameters are set by the OCC profile: MONO16, 1920x1200, 1x1, FITS.

Camera Controls
● Exposure​ - there is a box you can type into or use a slider to change the exposure time.
Load OCC to get back to 500 ms. You will need to manipulate this during various setup
steps. Quick Picks is useful if the precise value you want is listed. Auto should never
be selected. Note: if you change the exposure time with the slider, it add crazy
unnecessary precision to the header, eg 0.100000000998405 instead of 0.1, so typing
is preferred when taking data to be saved.
● Gain​ - this sets the amplification. A larger number is more amplification and is inversely
proportional to the usual gain we talk about for astronomical detectors. This can be
useful when working with bright objects.
● Offset​ - This setting defaults to 0. Think of it as an additive bias to the signal. It brings
the sky level to a higher DN level. If you make this too high you will compromise the
dynamic range of the detector. Stay alert for last minute determinations of a good
setting for this value. If completely unsure, 0 is a safe value.

GPS Controls
This is set by the OCC profile. GPS should be on. ​AMZ note: As of May 20, Sharp Cap does
not add the longitude, latitude and altitude of a site to the header or associated camera
settings file that comes in the folder created by exposure set. You MUST write your
location down on the log sheet (the white GPS pop up window has lat and lon only--
apparently altitude is not transmitted in the QHY firmware, if you can get altitude via
another GPS, please write it down!).

Image Controls
None of these controls should be adjusted. Gamma=1, Brightness=0, Contrast=0, Timestamp
Frames=Off

Thermal Controls
This is set by the OCC profile. Cooler power is set to “auto” and the target temperature is set to
0 (deg C).

Preprocessing
These functions are not to be used. Both set to “None”.

Display Controls
Do not use. Leave all controls set to 1.0

Useful tidbits
● The program has a “night vision” mode. Normal looking for day use, mostly red for night
time use. To change this setting look in File -> SharpCap Settings and look for the entry
“Display in night vision colours”. Select or clear as desired. Click “Apply” to affect the
change and “Ok” to leave the configuration window. Do not change anything else on this
screen.
Baseline settings
This information documents the configurable settings of the software, built from version
3.0.3906.0 (2017-05-13)

File->SharpCap Settings

General
✓ Automatically connect to camera when SharpCap starts
◻ Display in night vision colours
✓ Save Capture settings file alongside each capture
“Default Zoom” and “Saved Target Names” are not important.
◻ Show tips when SharpCap starts
◻ Start cameras with ‘Auto’ output format (for supported cameras)
Preferred Video Format: ​SER
Preferred Still Format: ​FITS

Hardware
All settings should be “​None​”

Filenames
Save captured files to: ​C:\Users\mu69\Desktop\SharpCap Captures
✓ Organize captured files into subfolders
First by: ​Date Then by: ​Target Name
◻ Use UTC times in file and folder names
✓ Use sortable date format (YYYY-MM-DD)
◻ Create WinJUPOS Compatible File Names
◻ Include time in filenames
✓ Create subfolder for each sequences
Do NOT modify the sample filenames, let the options chosen dictate the form of the names.

DirectShow
Settings not relevant to the QHY camera.

Startup Scripts
None.
How to upgrade SharpCap in the field
If instructed by the team leader(s), an upgrade of SharpCap is handled by distributing a
self-installing executable that will do the upgrade.
1. Make sure SharpCap is not running
2. Plug in USB stick containing new version of SharpCap, browser window opens
3. Open SharpCap folder
4. Double-click on version number as directed by team leader
5. Popup window will prompt if you want this program to make system changes, go ahead
and approve
6. Upgrade takes just a few seconds. When done, close all related windows to the
upgrade process and eject USB stick.
7. Open SharpCap and verify the new version is installed. If it didn’t work, report the error

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