It was one like this - I don't have the exact link anymore but plenty that are exactly like it
Shoot a video. That will get rid of motion blurr. You're attaching your phone, right? If not, I recommend this. Remember to lower exposure on Jupiter to get the detail, should be able to do that with video as well.
You can get an adapter like this. It holds a phone steady.
You should buy an adapter like this. If it's possible to get, you'll be able to hold the phone on the telescope and take pictures with the help of headphones on chord or a timer (to not shake it). I remember there's no headphone port though...
You should buy a universal smartphone-eyepiece adapter like this one.
I also recommend to pay attention to focusing both on telescope and phone (manual mode on your smartphone). Look up stacking photos. It's a technique to get a shot with details of each individual stacked frame, where there weren't all the details in thr seperate frames. On planets and the moon you should lower exposure and ISO as, they're pretty bright.
A smartphone mount is a must-have, for $20 it's allowed me to do lucky imaging of planets, transits like this, and even some shorter long exposures. You can find them on Amazon, like this, or anything similar would work, no need to spend over $20!
I used one similar to this, but there are many other identical ones under different brands on Amazon. No need to spend more than $20!
Process: Attach phone in mount and center the censor in the eyepiece. Find saturn, adjust ISO/exposure (takes some experimenting, you want the most detail), and take a couple minutes of video at the highest resolution possible (others say to go for the highest frame-rate possible but I've found very different for smartphones). Saturn will move in the field of view so you'll have to pause the video and re-adjust the scope. Then use PiPP, Autostakkert, and Registax to centre, stack, and edit the output image - there are some tutorials on youtube that you can search for. I'm thinking of making my own completely-comprehensive tutorial for all this for my own channel!
I can't recommend a phone mount enough. Here's one similar to the one that I use, but there are many of the same one under different brands on amazon
The magnification is a combination of my 6mm eyepiece and cropping the final image
Thank you and clear skies!
I got the cheapest phone mount I could find on Amazon. It works well for now, but I think it won't last for very long. One day I might just slightly overtighten a screw at I think it will break pretty easily.
You should get this adapter that lets you screw your mobile phone over your eyepiece of your telescope so you can take more stable pictures and videos: https://www.amazon.co.uk/LAKWAR-360%C2%B0Rotatable-Binoculars-Microscope-Astronomical/dp/B07GXHLSY1/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=Mobile+phone+telescope+mount&qid=1605612937&sr=8-5
You should see if you can buy this. It's a clamp for your phone to be mounted on the eyepiece, and it would make the image much more stable. Then, you should try to make a video. With the phone you have, you should be able to long press or something on the screen in video mode and change the light settings with a kind of slider or simmilar stuff. That would allow you to change the often overexposed look into Jupiter with quite some detail. Then, record a couple videos. Not only will you be able to see better what detail you've captured and what is noise (noise will flash around and detail will stay in place), but you'll also be able to get rid of most noise and atmospheric disturbances with stacking. I recommend to first capture the videos, then you can look up stacking. Some pretty good tutorials exist.
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Something cheap like this works, I bought and tested one in the past. Look for similar ones in your local Amazon. Don't waste 500 usd/eur/gbp/ whateverCoin on an adapter as others suggest. Spend the 500 in a good lense or a good reference subspecialty book.
Thank you! I used this phone adapter so I don't have to hold it by hand https://www.amazon.com/LAKWAR-Smartphone-Digiscoping-Monoculaire-Astronomique/dp/B07GXHLSY1
About the colors, I don't know. Maybe someone else can answer ?
Yes. I saw Jupiter and its moons through a £150 telescope (Skywatcher Heritage 130p) but Saturn was really hard to see. You might want to spend a bit more. But the Skywatcher Heritage 130p is a great beginner telescope and you can get an adapter like the one below to hold your phone to the eyepiece to take pics and videos. https://www.amazon.co.uk/LAKWAR-360%C2%B0Rotatable-Binoculars-Microscope-Astronomical/dp/B07GXHLSY1/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=telescope+phone+adapter&qid=1606656438&sr=8-5
Also use Stellarium or a free app to find out where its.