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LA TERCERA LUNA SALIERON TODOS A MIRARLA (era, era asi de grande, que mas de uno penso en el Padre Eterno, Se secaron las risas, se fundieron las luces y comenzo el infierno, la gente huyo a su casa porque por una noche regreso el invierno) - Composition Thursday
© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
Les fases de la Lluna es deuen al fet que només veiem la part de la superfície lunar on hi toca la llum del Sol directament, com la part inferior d'aquesta lluna en quart creixent. De vegades la part fosca de la Lluna és il·luminada tènuement per la llum del Sol reflectida a la Terra, com un immens reflector d'un estudi fotogràfic, que permet veure el disc lunar sencer d'un color més apagat. Aquest efecte es coneix amb el nom de Lluna cendrosa.
Las fases de la Luna se deben al hecho que sólo vemos la parte de la superficie lunar donde toca la luz del Sol directamente, como la parte inferior de esta luna en cuarto creciente. A veces la parte oscura de la Luna es iluminada tenuemente por la luz del Sol reflejada por la Tierra, como si fuera un inmenso reflector de un estudio fotográfico, que permite ver el disco lunar entero de un color más apagado. Este efecto se conoce con el nombre de Luz cenicienta.
Canon EOS 40D + 70-200 f/4L IS @ 200mm
f/4
4s
ISO 200
QUANDO UN RAGGIO DI LUNA IMPROVVISA OGNI VOLTA UNA NOTA DIVERSA PER NOI (che sera per sera la nostra canzone sarà) - Composition Thursday
© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
Flowers come into full bloom and corn is ready to plant. Also called the Corn Planting Moon and the Milk Moon.
Waxing gibbous towards Full Moon, May 14, 2014 - A waxing gibbous moon appears high in the east at sunset. It’s more than half-lighted, but less than full.
People sometimes see a waxing gibbous moon in the afternoon, shortly after moonrise, while it’s ascending in the east as the sun is descending in the west. It’s easy to see a waxing gibbous moon in the daytime because, at this phase of the moon, a large fraction of the moon’s day side is facing our way. Thus a waxing gibbous moon is more noticeable in the sky than a crescent moon, with only a slim fraction of the lunar day side visible. Also, a waxing gibbous moon is far from the sun on the sky’s dome, so the sun’s glare isn’t hiding it from view.
LA SEXTA LUNA ERA EL ALMA DE UN DESGRACIADO (que maldecia el haber nacido, pero sonreia, cuatro noches sin haber cenado con las manos, con las manos, manchadas de carbon, tocaba el pecho una señora y manchaba y reia creyendose el patron) - Composition Monday
© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
Taken with a Canon 600D using a F4 IS L 70-200mm Zoom Lens with a Canon x2 Teleconverter. Lens at 400mm, shot in hazy milky cloud
A super blood red moon occurred on January 20th, 2019. This will be the last lunar eclipse moon until 2022. The raw file was processed in Digital Photo Professional. PaintShop Pro was used to edit the image. A histogram adjustment layer was used to reduce the tonal range's contrast. A levels layer was used to slightly darken the mid tones. The noise was reduced with a salt and pepper filter.
Taken with a Canon 600D and a Canon F4 IS L 70-200mm Zoom Lens at 200mm. Image also cropped to gain size
Taken with a Skywatcher 6" Refractor and Canon 500D. Best 20 of 50 images stacked in R6. No Filters used
The Moon at First Quarter, 7 days, Aquarius
Without edition, only crop and b&w via RAW
1/200s . f/5.6 . EV -2/3 . ISO 200 . 300mm
Sacramento/MG/Brasil
La Luna en fase menguante, cerca de su cenit, a las 6 de la mañana en Rosario, Argentina. Foto oscurecida y contrastada para mostrar detalles de la superficie lunar.
The waning phase of the Moon, close to its zenith, at 6 AM in Rosario, Argentina. Picture has been darkened and contrast-enhanced to show details of the lunar surface.
Taken with a ED80 Refractor and Canon 500D. 10 images stacked shot in Mono as moon was a deep yellowy orange at the time as very low in the sky behind light clouds
The Moon has phases because it orbits Earth, which causes the portion we see illuminated to change. The Moon takes 27.3 days to orbit Earth, but the lunar phase cycle (from new Moon to new Moon) is 29.5 days. The Moon spends the extra 2.2 days "catching up" because Earth travels about 45 million miles around the Sun during the time the Moon completes one orbit around Earth.
The image was exposed for the ambient light of the sky, burning out the moon. However, there is a reasonably sharp reflection of the moon in the picture. The reflection is from the lens elements. The raw file was processed in Digital Photo Professional. The image was edieted in PaintShop Pro. The reflection of the moon was selected and copied to a separate layer. A levels layer, with a hard light blending mode and an opacity of 15%, was used to adjust its tonal range. The details were enhanced with a local tone mapping adjustment layer.
Oldest known surviving image of the moon, and...appropriately enough, one of the large dark areas is...Mare Tranquilitatis!
UNA MAÑANA CAMINANDO SOBRE TU CUERPO SEMBRÉ EL OFICIO DEL AMANECER, SE LEVANTAN LAS ESTRELLAS Y EL SOL NO ALUMBRA MI SUEÑO, MUJER - Composition Monday
© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
A not-quite-full moon rose at sundown this evening on the way home from work on my "back-40, avoid-the-traffic" route off of Ft. Campbell (12-8-2011). It will officially be a full moon this Saturday, the 10th, with a full lunar eclipse occurring, as well. Asia and Australia get to see the show in its entirety while those of us here in North America will see varying stages of the eclipse as the moon sets (it will be best viewed in the American and Canadian west while those east of the Appalachian Mountains won't be able to see it before the moon sets...). We also get an opportunity to see an unusual effect that one wouldn't think possible: a selenelion. Both the eclipsed moon and the rising sun will be visible at the same time. Doesn't make sense, eh? I won't give it away for it's in one of the two links below... {chuckle} It makes sense once one thinks about it, I promise! :-)
eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/OH/OH2011.html#LE2011Dec10T
www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/12/08/saturdays-lunar-eclips...
EN MI CIUDAD NADIE TE HARA DAÑO NUNCA MÁS (habrá tiempo para tu prisa, tendrás todo por hacer) - Composition Tuesday
© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
Not the sharpest image of the moon I have ever taken, but it's really difficult when there is not much showing. I used the 5D MKII with the EF 70-200mm f/2.8L USM and EF 2x Extender to give me a max of 400mm :-( and of course placed it on a tripod with remote trigger to eliminate as much camera shake as possible. Oh and of course I heavily cropped the image.