Git commit 07f3aeaa6fea9d0b551f0df9dd729244b23d64cf by Eric Dejouhanet.
Committed on 29/12/2021 at 17:21.
Pushed by edejouhanet into branch 'edejouhanet-master-patch-35811'.

Update doc/ekos-scheduler.docbook

M  +6    -6    doc/ekos-scheduler.docbook

https://invent.kde.org/education/kstars/commit/07f3aeaa6fea9d0b551f0df9dd729244b23d64cf

diff --git a/doc/ekos-scheduler.docbook b/doc/ekos-scheduler.docbook
index 76adb3b85..1348f67d5 100644
--- a/doc/ekos-scheduler.docbook
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@@ -332,22 +332,22 @@ exit(0)
             The <guilabel>Mosaic Job Creator</guilabel> in the Ekos Scheduler 
will create multiple Scheduler jobs based on a central target. It requires that 
you select first one target and one sequence file. The Sequence File contains 
all the information necessary to capture an image including exposure time, 
filters, temperature setting, &etc, and that information will be used for each 
pane of the mosaic. Observation job conditions and constraints shall be 
assigned too, so check that they are as per your requirements. You may simply 
prepare a new job without adding it, or pick an existing job, as long as both 
target and sequence file fields are valid in the Scheduler form. If you added 
jobs to the observation list previously, Ekos will ask you if you would want to 
keep or remove them before inserting the mosaic jobs in the list.
         </para>
         <para>
-            When your target and conditions are ready, start the Mosaic Job 
Creator by clicking on the icon next to the <guibutton>Find</guibutton> button 
in Ekos Module. A new window will open with a left-side form and your target 
centered in a sky chart. For convenience, maximize that window. There is a help 
icon on the top left part of the sky chart. Move your mouse over it to display 
the latest documentation of the tool.
+            When your target and conditions are ready, start the Mosaic Job 
Creator by clicking on the icon next to the <guibutton>Find</guibutton> button 
in Ekos Module. A new window will open with a left-side form and your target 
centered in a sky chart. For convenience, maximize that window. There is a help 
icon on the top left part of the sky chart. Move your mouse over it to display 
the latest documentation of the tool. Each gadget also has its own tooltip.
         </para>
         <para>
-            On first use, you need to enter your equipment settings including 
your telescope focal length in addition to camera's width, height, and pixel 
dimensions. Finally, you need to enter the rotation of the camera with respect 
to north or the position angle. If Ekos is already started, you may retrieve 
optical information by clicking the <guibutton>Fetch</guibutton> to fill those 
fields automatically. However, if the camera rotation angle is unknown at that 
step, you will first need to use the <link linkend="ekos-align">Align 
module</link> to solve a field near the celestial equator in order to determine 
it precisely.
+            On first use, you need to enter your equipment settings including 
your telescope focal length in addition to camera's width, height, and pixel 
dimensions. You also need to enter the rotation of the camera with respect to 
the celestial pole your mount is pointing to. If Ekos is already started, you 
may retrieve optical information by clicking the <guibutton>Fetch</guibutton> 
to fill those fields automatically. However, if the camera rotation angle is 
unknown at that step, you will first need to use the <link 
linkend="ekos-align">Align module</link> to solve a field, preferentially close 
to the celestial equator, in order to determine it precisely.
         </para>
         <para>
-            Next, enter the desired <guilabel>overlap</guilabel> and number of 
horizontal and vertical <guilabel>mosaic grid</guilabel> panels (&eg; 2x2, 3x3, 
&etc;). The sky chart will update automatically after a short time, with target 
FOV calculated given the number of panels and your camera's FOV. By default, 
the percentage of the overlap among images is 5%, but you can change this value 
to your desired value. Changing the <guilabel>overlap</guilabel> will adjust 
the <guilabel>mosaic grid</guilabel> to cover the same area, while changing the 
<guilabel>mosaic grid</guilabel> will extend or shrink the mosaic area.
+            Next, enter the desired <guilabel>overlap</guilabel> and number of 
horizontal and vertical <guilabel>mosaic grid</guilabel> panels (&eg; 2x2, 3x3, 
&etc;). The sky chart will update automatically after a short time, with target 
FOV calculated given the number of grid panes and your camera's FOV. By 
default, the percentage of the overlap among images is 5%, but you can change 
this value to your desired value. Changing the <guilabel>overlap</guilabel> 
will adjust the <guilabel>mosaic grid</guilabel> to cover the same area, while 
changing the <guilabel>mosaic grid</guilabel> will extend or shrink the mosaic 
area. To reset the extents of the mosaic field of view to the area expectedly 
covered by the grid, click <guibutton>Cover FOV</guibutton>.
         </para>
         <para>
-            The large number on the grid rendering represents the order in 
which panes will be captured. The default S-shaped choice, that is, west-east 
then alternating high-low/low-high moves, ensures minimal movement of the mount 
during observation. Uncheck <guilabel>Minimum mount move</guilabel> to revert 
to west-east/high-low movement only.
+            A large overlap will make frame stitching easier during 
post-processing, but will more panes to cover the desired extent. However, if 
you already know the minimal amount of sub-frames your rejection algorithm will 
use during post-processing, you may want to increase the overlap to attain that 
amount on the areas covered by multiple panes. For instance, a 4x4 mosaic grid 
with 75% overlap has 16 sub-frames covering the central intersection, which is 
enough for Windsorized Sigma rejection. Although the resulting stack does not 
have the same height on all parts of the final frame, this method gives you 
control on signal-to-noise ratio and allows you to provide context to your 
target while exposing a relatively low number of captures.
         </para>
         <para>
-            If your mosaic is located close to a celestial pole, you may 
observe that rendered panes start rotating due to the raising declination. Use 
the <guilabel>overlap</guilabel> to ensure panes cover the desired frame 
extents properly. A large overlap will make frame stitching easier during 
post-processing, but will more panes to cover the desired extent. However, if 
you already know the minimal amount of sub-frames your rejection algorithm will 
use during post-processing, you may want to increase the overlap to attain that 
amount on the areas covered by multiple panes. For instance, a 4x4 mosaic grid 
with 75% overlap has 16 sub-frames covering the central intersection, which is 
enough for Windsorized Sigma rejection. Although the resulting stack does not 
have the same height on all parts of the final frame, this method gives you 
control on signal-to-noise ratio and allows you to provide context to your 
target while exposing a relatively low number of captures.
+            The large number drawn in the corner of each grid pane represents 
the order in which panes will be captured. The default S-shaped choice, that 
is, west-east then alternating high-low/low-high moves, ensures minimal 
movement of the mount during observation. Uncheck <guilabel>Minimum mount 
move</guilabel> to revert to west-east/high-low movement only. The coordinates 
of each pane are rendered in their center as degrees, minutes and seconds. 
Finally, the angle each pane rotates from the center of the mosaic is displayed 
at their bottom. If your mosaic is located close to a celestial pole, you may 
observe that rendered panes start rotating visibly due to the raising 
declination. Use the <guilabel>overlap</guilabel> to ensure panes cover the 
desired frame extents properly.
         </para>
         <para>
-            If you need to adjust the position of the mosaic, click on the 
view and drag the chart to recenter your target. When satisfied, set the 
frequency of alignment and focus steps during the mosaic execution, choose an 
output folder and accept the dialog. Ekos shall create an observation job and a 
corresponding customized sequence file for each panel. All the jobs shall be 
saved to an Ekos Scheduler List (<literal role="extension">.esl</literal>) file 
that you can load on any suitable observing night and it will pick off where 
you left.
+            If you need to adjust the position of the mosaic, click on the 
view and drag the chart to recenter your target. When satisfied, set the 
frequency of alignment and focus steps during the mosaic execution, choose an 
output folder and accept the dialog. Ekos shall create an observation job and a 
corresponding customized sequence file for each panel. Save the plan to an Ekos 
Scheduler List (<literal role="extension">.esl</literal>) file with the 
<guibutton>Save as...</guibutton> button, so that you may load it on any 
suitable observing night and, with the <guilabel>Remeber Job 
Progress</guilabel> option, it will pick off where you left.
         </para>
         <para>
             With Ekos Scheduler, multi-night imaging is greatly facilitated 
and creating super mosaics has never been so easy.

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