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Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Total Solar Eclipse of 2010 July 11 total eclipse of the Sun is visible from within a narrow corridor that traverses Earth's southern Hemisphere. Occurred over the southern Pacific Ocean recorded history about this particular eclipse is that it crosses a unique and interesting archaeological site: Easter Island,Moon and Earth will come together to create a spectacular ,Solar Eclipse 19:24 Cancer

July 11, 2010

3:33 pm EDT - 12:33 pm PDT

Most visible over Cook Islands, French Polynesia, southern Chili, and Southern Argentina. Not visible from North America

10/14/2023 Eclipse

Partial Eclipse of the Sun

Eclipse. #teamjacob (Just kidding, I am #teamAnythingButTwilight)

Eclipse 2015 seen from Falkirk Scotland

This is a cell phone pic, taken next to my camera on the tripod. Taken 8 minutes after maximum eclipse. Here in Philadelphia, the eclipse was about 80 percent.

500mm f8 no name 1/4000eme

Eclipse de soleil derriere les nuages .

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Eclipse en Arce.

The Annular Eclipse of 2012 taken near Cedar City Utah. Some post processing done in CS5.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

La mejor foto que he conseguido sacar del eclipse con la Ixus 65, sin embargo, a pesar de lo que dice el EXIF, la foto está hecha a las 23:23 del dia 03 de marzo de 2007.

Partial solar eclipse obervation in SintecMedia offices.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

There was a Total Lunar Eclipse this morning! I live on the east coast, so I was only able to see the event at sunrise/moonset. A Total Lunar Eclipse occurs when the Earth passes infront of the Sun and blocks the sunlight from reaching the Moon. This process causes the Moon to be taken over by our shadow, initially becoming dark, but then turning a copper/red. This color change is essentially the result of all of the sunsets on Earth reflecting back from our lunar companion. The first was taken just after 5am, the second was taken around 6am, and the last two were taken between 6:20am-6:50am. (Eastern time)

 

As the Moon got lower, atmospheric disturbance, fog on my lens, and higher ISOs caused some additional noise, but I feel these four photos still turned out well. My camera settings varied, but I used my 300mm lens for all of them. Contrast, brightness and cropping were done in the GIMP.

 

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Blood moon, Lunar eclipse

Eclipse as seen from Arlington, VA

Eclipse Lunar 15 de junho de 2011

Pentax K-5 • 1600 ISO • Sigma 150-500mm f:5-6.3 APO DG HSM

Kenko Teleplus SHQ 1.5x teleconverter

TopazLabs DeNoise 5

 

Total moon eclipse 15/06/2011

Limpach • Luxembourg

 

If someone wants the photo without signature, contact me.

Eclipse Day in Clemson captured by Ashley Jones, Craig MaHaffey and Pat White.

Eclipse coaches Neoplan Tourliner leaving BBS

Eclipse of the sun. Just before sunset. ISO 1600. Shutter 1600. f/9. And for filters, an HD 8 and circular polarizer.

Fotos en secuencia de un eclipse

Partway into a total lunar eclipse.

Used a 5Dii body with a 70-200L and a x2 TC. Tripod and mirror lockup.

Nikki Reed attends the Gala Premiere of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse at Odeon Leicester Square on July 1, 2010 in London, England.

 

Solar Eclipse, year 2017

 

Canon Rebel T1i,

Filter: Baader AstroSolar Film,

Telescope Astrotech 65mm F/6.5.

Picture, if you will, clear skies over this awesome mountain. The sun just starting to be eclipsed as it clears the right flank. The eclipse proceeding up and to the right across the sky with a ring of fire exactly centered. That was my vision. I knew about this mountain since I first went to Crater Lake in 2007 and when I saw the eclipse path and also saw that the eclipse here would begin just after 8AM I hunted for a location where it would line up with this mountain. (Shout out here to Google Maps and Peak Visor). There just happens to be a campground across Diamond Lake from the mountain with a boat ramp (so there was a clear view). I couldn't plan this any better. I considered the desert southwest which would have a much greater chance of clear skies, but the eclipse would be higher in the sky, so no photos with interesting foreground. So I chose Oregon with a 55-60% historical chance of clouds. And statistics won out...

 

I took a photo every 1'10" of the complete 2.5+ hour duration of the eclipse. The one image of the sun shown is the only one that broke through the clouds in the entire sequence. My Photoshop skills aren't the greatest, but this may give an idea of what I was hoping to achieve.

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