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Credit: The M51 Whirlpool galaxy photography is shot by Adam Kohorn using iPhone 13 Pro Max

VideoStack for Galaxy

by yong chong loh

What is it about?

Credit: The M51 Whirlpool galaxy photography is shot by Adam Kohorn using iPhone 13 Pro Max.

App Details

Version
1.9
Rating
(2)
Size
75Mb
Genre
Photo & Video Education
Last updated
August 19, 2023
Release date
March 19, 2022
More info

App Screenshots

App Store Description

Credit: The M51 Whirlpool galaxy photography is shot by Adam Kohorn using iPhone 13 Pro Max.

Take video using videoCam app and export to videoStack(This app) for stacking.Stacking increases the signal of the photograph and reduces the noise. It makes galaxy and nebulae reveal their colours and structure. The app uses the computation power of the phone and integrates all the individual steps of desktop-based astrophotography into a simple phone app. A world where anyone can photo the galaxy. Feel alive when you photo the Milky Way!

Video Demo

Milky Way - https://youtu.be/EgaDj_SB_LQ
M31 - Andromeda Galaxy - https://youtu.be/qFF0WZ7IV9M
Import Video - https://youtu.be/rZAz0e_MUq8
M42 - Orion Nebula - https://youtu.be/pZLFdRAd5R4

Our Story

Currently it is expensive and time consuming to do astrophotography. In the simplest setup, you need to buy a tracking mount because of the Earth rotation. You need special camera to take interval shot of the sky. Then you need to upload these photographs to desktop software to align and stack them. Now you have a new way to photo deep sky object. You take a video and we will do the rest! The app includes 3 demo videos. The Milky Way video is taken by Daniel Mendell. And the M31 and M42 video is taken by the developer. 

File Size

VideoStack can do unlimited time stacking but the file size of the video can be large. It takes up space in your phone. First, use videoCam app to video efficiently. Choose the right frame per second to reduce your video size. For example to shoot the Milky Way, at resolution 4032 x 3024, 1 frame per second, it uses 50 Mb of phone disk for 1 minute of video. So a 5 minute video takes about 250Mb memory. To shoot nebulae or galaxy in a telescope, at resolution 4032 x 3024, 3 frame per second, it uses 150 Mb of phone disk for 1 minute of video. It is possible to half the video size if you choose a lower pixel resolution in VideoCam iOS app. Then export to videoStack app for stacking.

Have fun!

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