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This photograph is copyrighted and may not be used anywhere, including blogs, without my express permission.
A "Blood Moon" makes it's appearance early this morning at 5am. This was the shortest total lunar eclipse of the century. Lunar eclipses occur when the moon passes into the earth's shadow. When this happens, the earth blocks the sun's light from directly hitting the moon. A total eclipse occurs when the moon completely enters the darkest part of the earth's shadow, the umbra. Captured at Larry Berg Flight Path Park 04-04-2015
Heading towards a 90% coverage of the sun, the moon steadily eats into the heart of the solar system - as seen from Scunthorpe in the UK. 20th March 2015
As the sun is returning after teh eclipse we got a rainbow around the sun peeking through the clouds.
The 2015 eclipse of the sun viewed from Caddington, Luton, Bedfordshire.
More photos of the eclipse here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/sets/72157651047074498/
More photos of the moon here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/sets/72157649181409848/
Millions of people in the UK and northern Europe have glimpsed the best solar eclipse in years, did you get to see it ?
Taken with Canon 300mm f2.8 lens, 2x extender, 8 stop ND filter, Canon 7D body, 100 ISO, f.64, 1/25 second
As Europe enjoyed a partial solar eclipse on the morning of Friday 20 March 2015, ESA’s Sun-watching Proba-2 minisatellite had a ringside seat from orbit. Proba-2 used its SWAP imager to capture the Moon passing in front of the Sun in a near-totality. SWAP views the solar disc at extreme ultraviolet wavelengths to capture the turbulent surface of the Sun and its swirling corona.
Click here to view the footage.
Credit: ESA/ROB
As expected eclipse was visible from central Italy, 53,8% in Rome.
NEVER watch the sun directly or through the viewfinder or without the proper equipment in the proper way!
How I achieved this:
- Sunglasses on my eyes
- Tripod
- Kenko 2x
- Settings: ISO 100, 1/2000 seconds and f/16
- I've used 2 neutral density filters Hoya ND 400 + Hoya ND8 on the Tamron 70-300 USD VC at the focal lenght of 600mm (300mm x2)
- I composed and focused the sun by manually focusing over the moon bottom border by using the Liveview and the its 10x digital zoom feature
- Dark tape on the Viewfinder
More information about the Eclipse and its visibility:
- www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/spring-solar-eclipse-visible...
- www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/in/italy/rome?iso=20150320
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse_of_March_20,_2015
Canon 450D
Tamron 70-300mm F3.5-5.6 VC
1/2000 | ƒ/16 | ISO 100 | 600mm
Here is a close up of the Total Lunar eclipse which occured on september 28 2015.
50 images taken with a 600D at prime focus of a 200/800 mm newtonian telescope (no coma corrector) were stacked together using registax freeware.
This is my best photograph of the eclipse (and of a full moon) I have ever captured.
Note : In processing (lightroom + registax), I kept the natural colors of the Raw files.
Technical Datas :
Canon EOS 600D + 200/800 mm reflector
50 x 4 secs exposure
ISO 400
F/4
Location : Brittany, France
A composite of 8 images taken as the moon entered and exited total eclipse this morning at 5:00am. Taken at Pigeon Point Lighthouse.
Sony A7S, Canon 70-200mm f/2.8 at f/13, 1.3 seconds, ISO12,800
All images taken with same camera, lens, settings, and placement. Just combined 8 images using Lighten Mode in PS
This spectacular event occured a year ago, on september 28, 2015 : Total Supermoon Lunar Eclipse
I forgot to share this view of the totality, which is my best image I could capture so far.
More precisely, this is a 50 images stacking, taken with a Canon 600D at prime focus of a 200/800 mm Newtonian.
Each picture has an exposure time of 4 seconds (using lunar tracking).
The sky was pretty amazing that night, with almost no turbulences. That made this event an unforgettable moment, namely the most impressive I have ever lived in Astronomy.
Location : Normandy, France.
Technical Datas :
Canon EOS 600D + 200/800 mm reflector + LXD75 mount
50 x 4 secs exposure
ISO 400
F/4
Autostakkert 2 + lightroom softwares
The total phase of the september 28 lunar eclipse was simply outstanding !
The stars were even visible on the same picture !
This is a 6-second-single exposure picture taken at prime focus of a 200/800 newtonian telescope.
I kept the natural color saturation of the RAW file.
In fact, this image illustrates in a closely way what we were able to see behind the eyepiece :-)
Technical Datas :
Canon EOS 600D + 200/800 mm reflector
6 secs exposure
ISO 400
F/4
Location : Brittany, France
This photograph is copyrighted and may not be used anywhere, including blogs, without my express permission.
Got lucky with the weather this morning for the eclipse. Here's the sun reappearing from behind the moon
These images where taken on the morning of 20th March 2015 of the UK Solar Eclipse from Chester, Cheshire UK.
The equipment used to capture this was:
- Handheld Canon 5D Mark III
- Extender EF 2x III
- 70-200mm F2.8 IS (at 200mm (so 400mm)
I used two filters stacked as per:
- Polaroid HD variable Density (PLFILFDND82)
- HOYA ND400
#solareclipse #eclipse #StargazingLive #Eclipse2015
Taken using an Coronado Solarmax II 60 BF10 telescope and ASI120mm camera from my garden in Mansfield England.
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Eclipse parcial de sol desde Bembibre (León) fotografiado con el filtro solar Baader, más fotos y datos: AQUÍ
Más información del filtro: Aquí
Y del eclipse del 20/M: Aquí
Web de fotografía nocturna --| www.josemiguelmartinez.es
Mi revista ONLINE ----------------| En Flipboard