View allAll Photos Tagged eclipse2017

This is how I feel after the last week. Squiggly-eyed, but happy

This squadron put up an impressive during sunset..on eclipse eve..

United States Botanic Garden - Washington, DC

 

This photo featured in the PoPville blog.

Episodes from the 2017 total solar eclipse, as seen from near Ravenna, Nebraska, in the center of the path of totality. An hour and a half sequence of images taken on August 21st, 2017, starting about noon CST.

The 2017 Eclipse from Greenville, SC

Camera and lens still seem functional.

A 5 exposure HDR composite of the eclipse in Casper, Wyoming.

My little slice of the 2017 Eclipse shot atop Mt Diablo.

2024 will be the next total eclipse, and I plan to travel to Michigan and capture it in my hometown.

The classic eclipse leaf shadow shot. I've always wanted to see this in person. Partial eclipse 92 percent on the return side.

 

It was nice having a day where everyone looked up and saw something happening bigger than themselves. We should all try do it more often and not wait until next eclipse.

Legend has it that an eclipse, like a comet, foretells bad luck for someone, somewhere. Not for me since I had the good luck to live in a sunny place just outside the zone of totality. :)

117 Pictures in 2017 #13 Unlucky for some

A view of the partial solar eclipse with sunspots on Monday August 21st, 2017 as seen through an solar filtered telescope.

 

Location:

Dumont Hill Park

Scottsville, Kentucky

 

Telescope:

130 mm (5.1") diameter Sky-Watcher Newtonian reflector

650 mm focal length

F5

EQ2 mount

14 mm Speers-Waler 1.25" eyepiece

Kendrick Astro Instruments BAADER AstroSolar Film solar filter

 

Camera:

BlackBerry PRIV STV100-1 cell phone camera, hand-held to eyepiece with rubber eye cups open

F2.2 aperture

4.8 mm focal length (27 mm equivalent for 35 mm format film)

1/946 s exposure

ISO 50

Flash OFF

Auto white balance

Exposure compensation: 0

 

Processing:

Unprocessed

The total solar eclipse from first contact, through totality, through last contact. Taken from Farewell Bend State Park, OR on August 21, 2017.

At least it wasn't cloudy!

Images of the partial solar eclipse projected on the road via pine tree.

Laguardo Recreation Area, Lebanon, TN.

While everyone else was looking up, I tried looking down! Multiple images of the partial solar eclipse (about 90%) projected on the road through leafy trees.

Brooklyn, New York, by Svetlana Fomenko

So happy it didn't cloud over till after the eclipse ended..

Those little fireballs are several times larger than Earth.

Nikon f3, Nikkor 200/4 w/ ND2, ND4, and #25 red, Kodak Ektar 100.

I was so awe struck I did not double check my main camera’s. Yes I totally missed the shots. I have never done that. The only thing I have are my videos. Here are a few of my screen grabs. I think I have just become a Eclipse Chaser.

I did not prepare to attempt to shoot the eclipse earlier this week. The atmosphere did not cooperate and cloud cover was thick, splotchy and fast moving. A couple of minutes before I decided to see if the EVF on the Sony A7RII would help me. Using a Nikon to Sony adapter that allowed me to close down the Tamron's aperture coupled with a very fast shutter speed allowed the image in the EVF to be dark enough that I could attempt manually focusing. It was exceedingly difficult, that big Tamron on the small Sony body and no tripod. With the cloud cover changing moment to moment it was a constant battle to keep the exposure useable and then attempt manual focus. As fate would have it, during the peak of 89% coverage here in Chicago, the clouds were completely obscuring the view.

A couple of my friends enjoying the total eclipse here in Jackson, WY 8.21.17

 

www.jkaphanstudios.com

My son took this picture. The shadow under the tree is all in quarter sun shape! Our eclipse here in Tampa Bay, FL was at 80%.

Today was Eclipse day in North America. I am located along the the Gulf Coast in NW Florida. In this area we only had about 82%. I was on the grounds of Fort Pickens near the Pensacola Pass in Florida. It was still fun to photograph. Captured this image at 1:18 PM just before the clouds rolled in. Shot with the Sony A7RM2 using the Sony FE 70-200mm F2.8 GM along with the 1.4 Teleconveter. Used ND Filters equal to 16 stop (stacked). 1/5 sec at F5.6 ISO 50. Soon I will post a sequence of shots as the Eclipse occurred. It was exciting. Now I wish I had seen the full Totality.

Jet plane by the Sun during the eclipse.

Solar Eclipse Timeline 2017

 

#Eclipse #Eclipse2017 #SouthCarolina #Solar #SolarEclipse #TotalEclipse #Corona

One of the seven cameras Bohus used to shoot the Eclipse on Monday: a Canon EOS M with Magic Lantern installed on it and a Vivitar 200mm f/3 lens mounted via a Fotodiox Canon FD to EOS M lens adapter. Check out our Fotodiox YouTube or Facebook page to see a video featuring the seven camera rigs that Bohus used to capture the Eclipse!

This poster, designed exclusively for NASA, measures approximately 24”x36”.

Please use it without modification.

 

High res: eclipse2017.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/publications/Off...

 

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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Camped in Madras, Oregon.

 

Taken with Takahashi FC-100DF Flourite APO 100mm Refractor with FC-76D flattener & Canon 6D - 770mm F/7.7

 

Madras, Oregon.

Sequence of photos taken from Kimberly, OR during the August 21st, 2017 eclipse. This is not a scientifically accurate view of the progression since the images have been rotated such that they fit together nicely for this presentation. All photos were taken using a Nikkor 500mm mirror lens on a D5500. The center three images are unfiltered and the others were taken through a makeshift mylar solar filter.

The "diamond ring" effect dung the 21 August 2017 solar eclipse.

Archives/Navy Memorial - Washington, DC

A long exposure during the eclipse shows the illuminated moon from the light reflected off Earth. Nine automated photos taken mid-totality with exposures from 1 second to 1/500s captured the dynamic range for a super HDR image.

 

Taken with Takahashi FC-100DF Flourite APO 100mm Refractor with FC-76D flattener & Canon 6D - 770mm F/7.7

Taken using a pair of eclipse glasses as a diy solar filter

HDR of Corona at 2:46 PM on August 21, 2017, In McClellanville, SC

 

(Artifacts in the image are a result of the processing accentuating sensor banding.) The other version of this photo in the album does not suffer from this:

 

© Louis E. Keiner and Lesley M. Etherson

www.keiner.us

71% Eclipse over Long Island, New York. The lack of a filter helped to create this interesting effect.

Melody views the 2017 eclipse as the moon starts to cover the sun. Taken near the centerline between Long Creek and Mt Vernon Oregon near the center of the state.

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