View allAll Photos Tagged Neowise
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Comet C/2020 F3 (NEOWISE) this morning just above the church of the village Spicheren. The comet is a naked eye object! I saw it easily.
Single shot exposure (3 sec) captured with a Nikon D800 (ISO 320) and a 135mm lens.
Comète Neowise au-dessus du château de Comper, avec l'aimable autorisation des propriétaires
I chose this picture as my personnal "pic of the year", Here is the story behind it :
The choice was an obvious one here, even though this is not my most popular photo of the year.
I work at the Centre de l'Imaginaire Arthurien, which is located in Brittany, France, in the castle of Comper. I happen to be an astro enthousiast as well, so I was thrilled when the third comet of the year decided to shine through the summer. One day, a colleague asked me if I could place the comet above the castle. I wasn't sure it was possible, so I lost litteraly 2 weeks of sleep trying both during the evenings and very, very early morning. Finally, one moonless night, I could place it precisely where I wanted it, and asked another colleague to hold a light to the castle while I took the picture.
It may not be the most popular picture I took, nor even really the best, but for the work and dedication it took, and the result, this picture is clearly special to me.
A simple shot of comet Neowise between the tree tops. Double click on it and you can see about a half dozen meteors also. Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA, July 2020
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Neowise in the BC Sky
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I took this last portrait of Comet NEOWISE on the night of July 23rd, the night after its closest approach to Earth. (It says "Taken on July 25, 2020" in this listing, but that is incorrect.) It's been fun, F3! You were stunning and I will remember you fondly. Safe travels. See you in a few thousand! Maybe. Well, I probably won't but . . .
20 light frames
6 dark frames
Sony a7III + Samyang 135mm f/2
Orion StarShoot Compact Astro Tracker and EQ Base
135mm | f.2 | ISO 2000| 30s (tracked)
Calibrated and stacked in Astro Pixel Processor; processed in Photoshop and Topaz Denoise
Photographed from Mt. Bachelor in central Oregon
This morning 4:01am in Bavaria. I waked up without any alarm clock at 3:30 am this morning checked out the sky and decided to try the comet named after the space telescope that has discovered it.
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When I shot this last summe I realized the comet exceeded the frame so I switched to portrait and never processed this one. Now with no clear skies for 4 weeks it doesn't seem as bad as initially tought.
A leader of a photography meetup group I am a member of posted a last minute get together this past Monday morning to try and capture the comet from a pedestrian bridge over the Delaware River once the sun set. The forecast for the night skies was looking clear, and though light pollution was present, it was much less in this rural spot than trying to shoot it near NYC so it was worth the long drive to give it a go.
A small group of us spread out nice and wide across the long bridge for that socially distant etiquette that has become a routine part of our lives and yes, we all had masks on too. It was the first time I went out to shoot with fellow photographers in many months and it sure was nice.
I shot some close ups but liked how this one set the scene for a comet that won't be back in our neck of the woods for almost 7,000 years. Crazy.
I hope you all are doing okay and staying safe as we try to get through this one day at a time.
P.S. Can you see the Big Dipper?
I woke up at 4am every morning this week to capture this. Clouds socked me in every day but I got lucky today! Lovely comet, although I think folks need to use binoculars or a small scope to see it well at this time.
Nikon D750, Sigma 150-500mm @ 150mm, ISO2000, 10' exposure @ F5.6.
Watch the video : youtu.be/JNcC8QrPm2M
Photographie Olivier Joseph – Tous droits réservés – 9 juillet 2020
Comet NEOWISE's last hurrah. Brightness was about 4.5 magnitude and was barely visible in view finder. Green nucleus was very apparent in images. Tail length was greater than 6 degrees in this image.
Tech Specs: Nikon d3500, Nikkor 180mm f/1.4 @ f/5.6, iso 1600, 19x30s (Astrotrac Mount), raw, 10:30PM to 10:40PM, PixInsight, Lightroom, Photoshop. Transparency 7 of 10.
Managed to get out to a slightly darker site last night about 7 minutes away from my house. No home woodlot to block my view, :). Minimal processing, and needs some work, but still happy with the detail this amazing celestial object is showing.
Notice the second tail ... faint blue ion tail ilikely produced by ultraviolet radiation and interactions with particles from the sun known as the solar wind.
Shot in Labrador under very clear skies.
On the way back home, we decided to shoot comet c/2020 f3 neowise one more time. So, we stopped at Trona Pinnacles, Star Treck The Final Frontier filming pinnacle to do it.The pinnacles were lighted up by a car passing by.
Comet Neowise in the evening skies of Central Virginia with the encroaching clouds from a distance storm lit up from the bottom by sodium vapor lights. The two bright stars just below the comet are Kappa and Iota Ursa Majoris.
100 pics, taken with f4, 30 secs iso 200, canon 5dmkiii, canon 25-105 f4
stacked to one picture.
taken on july 12, just south of harlingen, netherlands.
in explore on july 13 2020
This image was captured on July 21, 2020 from the West Coast of the Garden Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
July21Comet_NEOWISE
The very last night in Menorca, we spent some time with neowise.
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This mornings view of comet C/2020 F3 NEOWISE. Up at 3am and I walked outside to a wonderful display of noctilucent clouds and the comet hanging delicately in the pre dawn sky. Any tiredness evaporated at the sheer beauty of the scene. The comet is easily seen with the naked eye and this picture shows it pretty much as seen.
Canon 80D Sigma 17-70mm at 58mm. Single frame of 10 seconds at 800 iso.
Been on a Flickr hiatus, so figured I get back into the swing with my version of Neowise, taken a couple weeks ago.
Throwback to July 2020 and the many nights I spent chasing Neowise. This is by far my favorite image and one that I spent days planning.
The comet NEOWISE seen over the Las Virgenes hills!
I shot this last night from a the end of a neighborhood street - amazing it can be captured here even with all the city light pollution. But, be warned - a camera on long exposure can capture the night sky MUCH better than the human eye can see it. With the naked eye I could only just barely spot the comet once I knew where to look.
If you want to go look for the comet aroun here you’ll need some kind of technical aid to see it better, like binoculars or a decent camera and tripod. You can also use a phone app that will show you where it is (I used Sky Guide).