I'm working through Fundamentals and have a question about dark frame best practice - my apologies if already asked and answered (if so, please just point me to the right thread).
In Cosmetic Correction > A Story about Hot Pixels, Adam seems to imply that it is better to take a long "high quality" dark frame and not to worry about "hot" pixels (dithering and well behaved sensor is assumed). Rather than take shorter Dark Frames to match the Light Exposure time. My questions then are;
1) Am I understanding the content correctly?
2) If dark current is linear, why would, say, a 30 minute dark frame be any better quality than the integration of 6 x 5 minute dark frames?
3) Adam doesn't describe how you would use a 30 minute dark frame to calibrate a 5 minute light frame in this video - but does drive home the point that the dark current is linear - so I would assume that it should be possible, for example, to simply scale a 30 min dark frame in pixelmath with something along the lines $T/6 to give a 5 min dark frame - is that true?
4) In the following section on WBPP > Flat Darks and Dark Frame Optimization, Adam partially answers 3) above by describing how WBPP uses some "black magic" iterative process to scale an unmatched Dark Frame to calibrate a light. But, if the Dark Current is linear, why does the scaling require iteration and black magic rather than a simple ratio of the exposure times?
I ask this as I'm just getting started with a cooled CMOS camera and I'd really love to simply pick a fixed temperature, take one long master dark and be able to use it to calibrate all my images for months at a time.
Many thanks - Paul
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