View allAll Photos Tagged Eclipse2017
Approximately 5 minutes of video, including the entire period of totality for the location, Sherman, MO, during the Solar Eclipse on August 21, 2017. Video begins ~13:15:30
Eclipse Times for Location (38.534556, -90.588472) as follows:
Start of partial eclipse (C1): 11:49:16.6
Start of total eclipse (C2): 13:16:38.3
Maximum eclipse (MAX): 13:17:40.7
End of total eclipse (C3): 13:18:42.9
End of partial eclipse (C4): 14:43:51.8
Bear in mind that the exif data show time from my camera, which while close, was probably not atomically synced to actual time.
Edited August 23, 2017 to add:
Sorry, folks! I just realized that this video is cut short due to Flickr's (somewhat disappointing) 3 min video limit...
For the full video, I guess you'll have to go the Facebook, here: www.facebook.com/sou4501/videos/10207698885029285/
I've made the video Public, so it should be visible to anyone!
Explored: 2017_08_22 #184
www.flickr.com/photos/21820430@N02/36677898726/in/explore...
Last minute realization that I could see it using reversed binoculars. #waitedtoolong #eclipse2017 #doingitmyway
Bohus used seven cameras to shoot the Eclipse on Monday! Cameras included: Blackmagic Micro Studio 4K + Vivitar 300mm f5.5, Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera + Tamron 70-210mm f3.5-4, Canon EOS M with Magic Lantern + Vivitar 200mm f3, Fuji XT-2 + 500mm Telephoto, GoPro with Ribcage Mod + Sony 12.5-75mm f1.8, Samsung Nx1 + 500mm Telephoto, and a Sony A7R II + 1250mm Telescope. Quite a complex shoot!
Check out our Fotodiox YouTube or Facebook page to see a video featuring the seven camera rigs that Bohus used to capture the Eclipse!
Since I couldn't get a shot of the dark side of the moon, I overlaid one I had taken earlier, and made the totality complete!
Buck rail fence
Blue Ridge Parkway
25.08.2017 10:59
105mm 1/640 sec f/2.8 ISO 100
HIP Club 52 week photography challenge
Week 3: Fence
Prints,or framed artwork, available at louiselindsay.com/featured/total-solar-eclipse-at-clemson.... Also prints on metal, canvas, or wood.
Total solar eclipse, 2017, Clemson University, tailgazing party, #eclipse2017, #ClemsonUniversityEclipse #ClemsonEclipse
Taken 8/21/17, uploaded 8/23/17, 2017 08 21 a r72 TzBW SE Dark2 move CETC Eclipse SC-8210011-Edit.tif
Solar Eclipse 2017
A composite of 13 shots from yesterday's eclipse. The totality shot was taken without a solar filter.
Place: Madras, OR
Gear: Canon 5D Mark IV - Canon EF 100-400mm f4.5-5.6
"Eclipse de sol" - "Eclipse of the sun" - Eclipse de sol entre nubes - 26-02-2017
(Se sugiere ampliar)
twitter.com/DAIREAUXMHA/status/837096480506793985
#eclipse #eclipsedesol #eclipse #sun #nubes #clouds #magicsmoments #moon
Partial eclipse, August 21, 2017, in Scranton Pennsylvania. A lot of post work using my way to old software. All we need is ET or a witch on a broom in it.
If this was a photo of the unobscured sun, you'd see a delicious lens flare down at left, rather than the lens ring you get. I kind of adore it though. Another strange piece of eclipse magic.
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This is overexposed as it's one of the first photos I took of the totality, at the settings I had pre-set. And I had thought I locked my ISO before the eclipse but apparently not. Ooops.
SOOC because I don't trust my screen right now at all.
More Information from NASA on the 2017 Total Solar Eclipse:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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Solar Eclipse, Brusque, Santa Catarina, Brazil
Follow me on Instagram @tcheikaway
and 500px/katcheika
Blue Mood
By Joseph Cowlishaw
Smooth melancholy reverberates the blackness
Deep blues shadow the walls as an eclipse in midday
Brief and concise but dominate
A sense of wonder flows through the depths as a cool treeless shade
Erupting in alleviation
Aversion ensues through the hues of blues
Golden glow disrupts the ethos of silence
A buoyancy of introspection through the quaintness of quiet
Tranquility emerges from the abyss
Momentary obscurity vanquished
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I was thinking about how sadness and depression are very similar to the solar eclipse that is happening today throughout the USA. The eclipse at any location only lasts about two minutes. Those minutes may feel so much longer as we experience something so surreal - but they are still only minutes. I don't claim to understand depression and the feelings associated with it, but I do feel they are a small moment in comparison to the joy of this life and the warmth of the sun coming out of that momentary obscurity.
#blues #saxophoneplayer #eclipse2017 #moody #depression #lego #minifiguresbigworld #afol #legominifigures #toyslagram_lego #instalego #legostagram #brickcentral #legoart #legography #legogram #joecowlego #brickpichub #bricknetwork #toyartistry_lego #lego_hub #brickshift #vitruvianbrix #stuckinplastic #brickculture #toy_photographers #utahtoycrew #toydiscovery
And the day turned to night: quick car edits of the #Eclipse2017 as seen from Shaw Air Force Base over the F-16 Viper Demo Team.
It was magical. Clouds and occasional light rain would harass us through much of time before the totality, and maybe 90 seconds before the moment we were all waiting for, there was a cloud in the way.
But, it moved.
I'll try to cobble together a time-lapse out of the cloudy pre- and post-totality shots, but for now, here is a shot showing the two F-16 Fighting Falcons under the eclipse.
#TotalEclipse2017, seen from Shaw Air Force Base, over the F-16 Viper Demo Team.
Specs:
ISO500, f5, 1/6 second exposure time.
Time lapse of the solar eclipse shot from Kingston, Ontario using an Explore Scientific ED80 f/6 telescope, a Celestron AVX mount for tracking, and a Baaader solar filter.
All 3 hours of the eclipse shot at 1/640 second exposures @ ISO 75. -5EV. 30 second interval between shots
Music:
"Peaceful Desolation" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
More Information from NASA on the 2017 Total Solar Eclipse:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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It never got very dark way up here in Maine but it did get dark enough to feel like cocktail time.....so that was good!
Solar #Eclipse2017 photographed using the gaps between oak-tree leaves as a pin-hole lens. Lens: 50mm w/reverse ring filter
More Information from NASA on the 2017 Total Solar Eclipse:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
Follow us on Twitter
Like us on Facebook
Find us on Instagram
iss052e056122 (Aug. 21, 2017) --- As millions of people across the United States experienced a total eclipse as the umbra, or moon’s shadow passed over them, only six people witnessed the umbra from space. Viewing the eclipse from orbit were NASA’s Randy Bresnik, Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson, ESA (European Space Agency’s) Paolo Nespoli, and Roscosmos’ Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy. The space station crossed the path of the eclipse three times as it orbited above the continental United States at an altitude of 250 miles.
More Information from NASA on the 2017 Total Solar Eclipse:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
Follow us on Twitter
Like us on Facebook
Find us on Instagram
A wide angle view of Monday's Eclipse during totality in Idaho while a man watches the event through binoculars in the distance. The title is from the Chris Cornell song which came to me as I was watching totality. The goosebumps I already had now had goosebumps. Shortly after this shot I found out we were 12 miles away facing towards the burial ground of an experimental government reactor SL-1 that melted down horrifically in 1961, killing 3 people.