View allAll Photos Tagged fireball
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Con los Chicos del Alba de A. C. Alavavisión.
Model: Gunnar Heilmann
one single exposure - no photoshop
Fiber Optic, Adapter and Color Filter from Light Painting Paradise, Fenix LR35R, light scanner
A very bright fireball coming straight from below Venus and towards the horizon. This was probably a sporadic meteor not related to any particular meteor shower and I was very lucky to get the shot as it was just my second frame at the location. Sigle shot, lucky!
Long exposure sunset shot with a Hoya ND1000 filter.
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Sunrise is actually an illusion since the sun never goes away; it's the face of the Earth that moves away from it. As our planet rotates toward the east, the sun appears to "rise" in that direction. Sunlight is white, but as it enters the atmosphere, it passes through water droplets and gas molecules that cause it to scatter or refract. This breaks down white light into different shades of colors. Ever wondered why sunlight appears mostly in the hues of red, yellow and orange? That’s because when light gets scattered upon entering the atmosphere, these are the tones that have the longest wavelengths. The blues and the greens are much too short to be visible.
Info source: www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/smart-living/interesting-fact...
© All Rights Reserved. Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
Captan Blithering making the sparks fly.
Went for a light painting walk in the gorge last night with Captain Blithering.
I don't know how he stands at the center of all that heat and walks away unscathed.
Yesterday's Macro Monday's theme was the Four Elements: Earth, Air, Water and Fire.
See if you can guess what this was before it burst into flames? (look closely into its structure). It grew in the earth with water and air, and when I held a match to it ……..pooof! It became a fieball! It was completely consumed in about a second, leaving a nice fragrant aroma, and a neat little pile of seeds.
I couldn't believe how fast it burnt. It was one of the dandelion heads, a clock, that I used in my shots of coloured hair-dos and Newton's Cradle.
I should have used this for the Four Elements.
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This is another full moon picture from west side of San Diego airport. We used Planit for photographers to calculate the moon rise time and position. We wanted to shoot airplane inside of moon. However, we were too close to the airport and airplanes are too big for the moon. Instead I got this one when airplane's fire touched the edges of the moon image, it made the moon looked like a fireball.
Last time I went to the Palais de Tokyo to catch the fire jugglers I was not fully satisfied with my photos. So I went back a few days ago and tried again.
I was happily surprised to see that some people were performing fire breathing. Taking such shots is quite difficult, since you have to adjust the camera settings in the dark and guess what value to use.
This time I got a few shots right and I will post them here on the next few days. Stay tuned and tell me what you think!
If you love our Fireball in the sky take a look a these:
www.flickr.com/photos/andygocher/albums/72157648252420622
Check out my top 50 shots at: www.flickr.com/photos/andygocher/sets/72157646224415497/
If you love our Fireball in the sky take a look a these:
www.flickr.com/photos/andygocher/albums/72157648252420622
If you like this check out my other top 50 shots at: www.flickr.com/photos/andygocher/sets/72157646224415497/
We picked a heck of a night to sleep under the stars. 5 nights before the Perseid Meteor shower peak, two fireballs streaked across the sky in Yoho National Park in Canada around 2:25am. This was shot with a 24mm lens on a full frame camera. In other words, it looked like the meteors took up the entire sky. (Explored # 441) www.rossellet.com
Fireball at Marske
Just after 11.30 p.m on the North Yorkshire coast at Marske. I was hoping to see signs of the aurora, it wasn't visible so I decided to do a stitched panorama of the boats lit by the town lights when this fireball suddenly appeared, like a streak of lightning it lit up the sky and then disappeared in a flash.
Geminids Meteor Fireball taken from Bartlesville Oklahoma December 13, 2017. Also visible is the silhouette of the weather vane on my pool house.
All rights reserved. No use without permission. www.michaelbryanphoto.com
Remixed 4/27/2011:
Completely reprocessed - increased size, recropped image, toned down tone mapping, darkened sky, reduced noise, resharpened, recolored... basically, it is a completely different picture.
The overbright sun would normally make this a difficult photo to take, but it worked pretty well thanks to HDR. The Golden Gate bridge is underneath that fog on the left hand side, hidden just out of view.
"Autumn Fireball"
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The biggest fireball I have ever catched on camera, and probably ever will. This was a great photographic moment for me!
This shot was taken tonight sept20th, a night full of awesome auroras in magnifcent shapes and colors. This shot however, was far from the one with the most auroras in from this night, but a magnificent fireball, reflected, above my favorite mountain "Otertin
den", 90min drive from Tromsø, northern Norway, deserves to go out first. Awesome autumnal colors in the forest and a completely silent river in front.
The fireball lasted for about 6-7seconds until it vanished behind the mountain, by the way this mountain is over 1350meters (4440feet) high, and I am standing only 600meters from the foot of it, so do not be fooled by the 14mm wide angle lens! There was some very distinguished blue colors surrounding the fireballs edges. Never ever seen anything big like this!
This frame has not been cropped, so it is 114 degrees field of view from the 14mm lens on a full frame camera.
Hope you like the shot, and if you do, please share it with the world!
More shots to come soon from this evening, stay tuned!
Shot with a Canon EOS 1D-X + Nikon 14-24 lens.
Best,
Ole