Neither does it have microscope settings. An adjustable, rotating polarizing filter (such as the type that screw-on eyepieces and camera adapters) is all that's needed. Simply bracket the shots by varying the extinction in each frame. The IR blocking filter may or may not be needed. If you can't change the software settings, this may produce acceptable results. On 6/25/07, Kurt Fisher <fisherka@csolutions.net> wrote:
Chuck, that's my point - they are overexposed but the question is whether there is any manual control of the exposure setting. For many of these small consumer hand-held digital cameras, there is no shutter speed or ISO control. You just tell the camera what type of scene you are looking at: daytime, indoors, etc. and its internal computer chip does all the settings automatically. (Humorously, the T10 has scene modes labeled "Pet" and "Food". Makes me wonder what kinda guy programmed this camera.) The problem is "Jupiter" or "the Moon" are not on its menu list and the camera will not figure out a correct exposure for solar system objects.