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Took this last night of the International Space Station going by the Big Dipper. Lined up perfectly. 48 second exposure.
Nach langer Wartezeit auf die richtigen Bedingungen, hat es heute geklappt. Der Transit der ISS vor der Sonne! In 697km
Entfernung und einer Geschwindigkeit von mehr als 27500km/h brauchte sie nur 1,27sec um vor der Sonne vorbei zu rauschen. Hier waren es 16 Bilder innerhalb von 0,75sec.
After a long wait for the right conditions, it worked today. The transit of the ISS in front of the sun! At a distance of 697 km and a speed of more than 27,500 km/h, it only needed 1.27 seconds to rush past the sun. Here there were 16 images within 0.75 seconds.
A long-exposure shot of the International Space Station as it passes over an erupting Soufreire Hills volcano on the Caribbean island of Montserrat.
The International Space Station flies through a partly cloudy night just before the Total Lunar Eclipse started on January 20.
At 12:38.45 AM this morning the ISS Transit the full moon at Woodburn Australia. With only one image out of five capturing the ISS flying over the face of the moon, with an ISO:800 and a shutter of 1/1600. Then after I used another 50 images stacked to use for the colour at ISO:100 and Shutter of 1/200.
A 10 shot sequence of the International Space Station, passing the disc of the Sun on the 5th Aug 2022 at 15:51:03.49s
A lot of patchy cloud about, and obviously at the time of the transit, the Sun was partially obscured. I was having to manually adjust the exposure constantly as the cloud was thickening and thinning. Still ecstatic at capturing my first Solar Transit. Hope next time the weather is kinder.
Northern lights were a bust last night but the space station came over and right through the Big Dipper.
Took a chance with the sky tonight, even with a moon in 1st qtr..the field was lit like a flood light was on... I was able to get a couple frames of the ISS.
One meteor about a minute before this which I missed.
I tried to compound 20 images, but Moon moved fast, even if it was 2 seconds. The image was blurred.
The Transit Finder website predicted a pass that was visible from my house today, so I set up the 6" Celestron and Herschel Wedge to get it.
I'm quite pleased with the detail level! I used a Nikon D500 in 60fps HD mode and a 2x barlow.
Ein lang gehegter Wunsch ging in Erfüllung. Nicht perfekt, mich freut es trotzdem, dass es geklappt hat!
A lot of science went into building the International Space Station and I am sure a lot of science goes into keeping it up there.
The ISS just before transiting the Moon as seen from my London back garden on the 22nd January.
Celestron Edge HD11 scope & ASI174MM camera
I managed to nip out to catch the ISS, and inadvertently at the same time a Satellite flare (above the moon)
Superb clear night outside...
I shot at f13, which is much more than I would normally use to get the star effect on the moon..
6x 30 second shots
Comments, Likes and shares all gratefully received ;)
Well, assuming it is the ISS, captured in 5 frames from 27 Aug 2014, 23:51:24 to 23:53:27pm, can anyone confirm? Sighted from Butchers Dam, Alexandra. The last frame the ISS lost it's reflection from the sun, so faded out.
Canon 600D and Samyang 14mm ƒ2.8 lens.
It is funny how life works sometimes. I always wanted to capture the ISS never had the opportunity. In this occasion I was only doing a star trails with the reflection of the lake, not knowing when the ISS will stop by and say hi. To my surprise I only noticed it once back home on the computer. I did a more “normal” edits but I tried also with the Infrared version by Nik. I quite enjoyed this unique look, especially reframed a square.