View allAll Photos Tagged Eclipse
P1010568
Top: Eclipse No. 60B, Hacksaw, Adjustable frame.
See: www.flickr.com/photos/100761653@N07/15594968047/
Detail: www.flickr.com/photos/100761653@N07/15241280839/in/photos...
Bottom: Eclipse No. 1270, Hacksaw, Non-adjustable frame
Detail: www.flickr.com/photos/100761653@N07/15428039145/in/photos...
I didn't get any eclipse shots that's out of the ordinary, nor the infamous ring of fire but unexpectedly, I did get this shot w/ the sun flares indicating the eclipse.
Haven't upload anything up on flickr for a while now.. still pondering if I should continue my subscription. Anyhow, for now you can find me on 500px or my website (www.ronlimphotography.com).
Sequence from Eclipse of 21st August 2017, Casper WY.
Partials have added colour (Baader film was used).
Una composición con algunas de las fases del eclipse de luna del día 16/06/11. Están sacadas con un 70-200 por lo que espero disculpéis el tamaño tan pequeño y demás fallos propios de la limitación del equipo.
Bruce Dickinson, IronMaiden, Cardiff Aviation, David Hayman, Morten B. Lund, Aeris Aviation, ONE Aviation, Eclipse Aerospace, Karmøy, Haugesund Lufthavn, Torp, Sandefjord Lufthavn, Bromma Stockholm Airport
GNU gdb 6.8-debian
Eclipse 3.3.2
On further tests, we now think Kdevelop is faster and more stable.
Bruce Dickinson, IronMaiden, Cardiff Aviation, David Hayman, Morten B. Lund, Aeris Aviation, ONE Aviation, Eclipse Aerospace, Karmøy, Haugesund Lufthavn, Torp, Sandefjord Lufthavn, Bromma Stockholm Airport
Shadow banding just before c2 from the 2017 solar eclipse taken in Carbondale IL. This image has been adjusted to accentuate this very low contrast event.
Shadow banding looks like impossibly fast rushing water or millions of snakes slithering wildly over the ground. It's a low contrast event, so its hard to see unless the area is light in value. We set out a piece of foam core in hopes of seeing it and were not disappointed.
I've not seen a lot of information on shadow banding and don't know if it is a well described phenomenon. It only appears for about 40 seconds just before and just after a total eclipse (before c2 and after c3.) As you can see, it's most apparent and intense closest to those times. At those times the sun is reduced to a thin sliver of its normal size and the solar light is highly collimated, far more than usual. This seems to indicate that the shadows are a differential path phenomenon similar to what is seen in Schlieren imaging or mirages. The highly collimated light beam is raking through the atmosphere at a great lateral speed and so gets bent about by differences in the refractive index of the earth's atmosphere and this enables these wildly animated diffraction patterns to be produced.
As you can tell by our excited exclamations, it's pretty amazing to see first hand!
Bruce Dickinson, IronMaiden, Cardiff Aviation, David Hayman, Morten B. Lund, Aeris Aviation, ONE Aviation, Eclipse Aerospace, Karmøy, Haugesund Lufthavn, Torp, Sandefjord Lufthavn, Bromma Stockholm Airport
Photographed this across two different cameras tonight. I kept the shutters going till they couldn't autofocus anymore. Also, the cold sapped the power right out of my batteries... Meh...
I rode the ISO up a little to get the last shot. What a great night!