View allAll Photos Tagged polaris
Done using Samyang 12 mm f/2.2 lens with 15 min exposure. I tried to capture the polaris with all the surrounding stars rotating around it. I also managed to capture the tail of the Milky Way which is this blurry could to the bottom right of the picture.
A picture of the stars rotating around the North Celestial Pole taken from Stokesley in North Yorkshire on 11 December 2015. The image is made up of 128 images taken over the course of one hour and ten minutes and stacked using StarStax software. Each image was a 30 second exposure at f/3.5 and ISO 400. The focal length was 18mm but I also used a basic wide angle converter to make the effective focal length 8mm. This does however cause some distortion around the edge of the image. In the image you can see the stars of Cassiopeia at the top left; Cepheus middle left; some stars of Ursa Minor behind the tree; and in the lower right quarter are stars of Ursa Major, including the Plough asterism. The low ISO has helped to bring out the colours of the stars nicely.
Latest 2022 Case D recolour of the Polaris Slingshot, one of my least favourite licensed Matchbox castings but unfortunately several are included in a full 72 count case bought online recently.
Mint and boxed.
Yet another, unfortunately, example of the latest 2022 Case C recoloured Matchbox Polaris RZR. Mint and boxed.
We pretend that our mobile phones are new kinds of Polaris.
Always with eyes on their screens looking for the right direction, we forget to look at the world all around us.
Album page with one photography. "Stella Polaris" in front of North Cape. From the album «Croisière de «Stella Polaris» au Cap Nord 6.-19. juni 1929.
NMFF.003695-23
A Canadian Forces CC-150 Polaris strategic airlifter (a converted Airbus A310-300) departs Quebec City's Jean Lesage International Airport after returning a plane-load of soldiers back to Canada from Afghanistan.
The Forces has five such aircraft for VIP, troop transport, light cargo transport, and air-to-air refueling.