View allAll Photos Tagged LunarEclipse

There's plan A, plan B, plan C, then there's whatever. Kev and I did our research, scoped out the areas, but in the end the moon made a feeble appearance behind the haze and much higher in the horizon than we wanted. So the next plan was to do a series of shots. But I found that I am too impatient and undisciplined-so the series is short and inconsistent. But at least it was a lovely evening with a couple of hundred of our closest friends and someone playing a guitar and someone on bass. Go Ducks!

Shot the eclipse with three different cameras. This is from a Canon 77D. I did not manage to get any good shots with this camera during the total eclipse, but I thought this one turned out well towards the end of the eclipse.

CLOUDY with a chance of NOT SEEING the Super Blood Moon Lunar Eclipse?

 

WATCH Live here: bit.ly/1LfspfW

 

No worries, we've got you've covered. Click on over to the live stream starting at 8:00 p.m. until at least 11:30 p.m. EDT broadcast from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., with a live feed from the Griffith Observatory, Los Angeles, Calif. Mitzi Adams, a NASA solar physicist at Marshall will discuss the eclipse and answer questions on Twitter. To ask a question, use ‪#‎askNASA‬.

 

NASA image use policy.

 

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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Part of a series, check this photostream.

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Brightest star is HIP 62421, mag 7

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IMG_3675

21:46h (8min prior to totality)

3" + ISO200

Canon 550D

Televue 85

Powermate Televue 2.5x

12 shots stacked in Lynkeos

Taken with my modest DSLR

Melbourne, Australia

26 May 2021

You've seen a flood of these in the last 12 hours, right? This was mine from last night. Cloud gaps were merciful for a bit. It was astounding through binoculars and I've tried to process this to capture that visual as best as I could. Single exposure.

 

The semi-bright star at the left limb was a few minutes from being occulted. HIP 76106, a 5.5 mag blue-white A2VII star in Libra. I didn't focus on watching for the moment it winked out, but it was gone a few shots later. I've never made an effort to watch a tight double-star suddenly shift in brightness for a second or two before disappearing, but would like to try some day. This particular star isn't cataloged as a double, so it wouldn't have performed like that anyway.

LUNAR ECLIPSE PHASES SEEN FROM HYDERABAD, INDIA

This morning's total lunar eclipse. Handheld (unfortunately).

More information on my blog

After getting up at 04:30 to see the Lunar Eclipse only to find our sky was totally cloudy. I was disappointed to put it mildly but I needed something else to do to fill the void. Hence my offering here.

 

What time will you be able to view the Super Moon Eclipse?

 

The images below show times to view it for Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), Central Daylight Time (CDT), Mountain Daylight Time (MDT) and Pacific Daylight Time (PDT).

 

All of South America and most of North and Central America will see the entire eclipse, while those west of roughly 120°W will see it in progress at moonrise. You won’t need special equipment to see it. Just go outside and look up!

 

NASA image use policy.

 

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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Does anybody know what the other dot is??

6:06 AM. Shadow on the upper left not quite noticeable yet. One of the small faces of the Hancock tower reflects the bright sky behind me as the sun rises.

 

☀️🌎🌕

 

Taken from Castle Island.

Totale Mondfinsternis über Saarbrücken

Shot the lunar eclipse with a few different cameras. This one is from a Canon SX50 superzoom. At 6400 ISO, the image is a bit soft after using noise reduction in post.

The earth's shadow starts to edge across the moon.

The 1st Lunar Eclipse/Supermoon combination since 1982. Thought i would mount my camera onto my smaller telescope and take some shots. It was my 1st blood moon for many years also. And the 1st one i could hopefully photograph. Sadly with problems with my mount, me knocking telescope out of focus whilst at totality and having to dodge the clouds led to a failure in capturing anything but a poor blood moon.

 

Telescope - Skywatcher 127mm, F1500, F11.81

  

Images taken by Stephanie Gill, and processed by Kevin Gill

Shot the lunar eclipse with 3 different cameras. This is from a Canon PowerShot G5X Mark II in 'star trail' mode. This was a last minute decision to see what I could get. This is from my driveway, hence the power lines. I should have found a better location for this shot but didn't think about it sooner. At least I was able to go inside and watch TV during the 60 minutes of the exposure. ;-)

The Moon at the 3 o-clock position is totality.

Stack of 7 photos taken with an iPhone 13 Pro attached to a NexStar 8SE telescope.

From the lunar eclipse on September 27, 2015 as seen from Vancouver Island University in British Columbia, Canada.

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