View allAll Photos Tagged solareclipse

at New York City 06/10/2021

Lens Carl Zeiss 135mm f2 APO-Sonnar

I drove down to Cornelia Fort here in East Nashville where my plan was to get some photos this event. I could not find a parking spot due to the crowds. I rode my Trek Mountain bike down there. One of the best thing I saw was the horizon glow in all directions. Different from a sunset in the glow was in every direction along the horizon. Another cool thing was the party atmosphere down there. People play "Here comes the sunshine by the Grateful Dead and Dark Side of the Moon album just as it to the darkest point. There was a strange glow. It was really a cosmic event. Literally, Figuratively, metaphorically and most importantly, spiritually!!!

... #TotalEclipse2024

 

April 8, 2024

Die partielle Sonnenfinsternis am 25.10.2022,

hier mit einem leichten Wolkenschleier. Aufgenommen im Rhein-Kreis Neuss.

I returned to my photos of the recent solar eclipse and mono-ized this one. :)

 

© AnvilcloudPhotography

March's partial solar eclipse with Barnegat Lighthouse. Low clouds spoiled the alignment, but we could still see the partial eclipse with the lighthouse once it cleared the clouds. Still cool to see.

Yesterday in Oslo, we had a 30% partial eclipse of the sun.

There were clouds first and when sun came out I managed to get this shot :)

Dallas, Oregon

 

When planning to come to a wedding on the 26th, my brother encouraged us to come 5 days early for the eclipse. What a treat!

2017-08-21 15.04.36 PS

  

Thanx for Viewin, Favin, and Commentin on my Stream!

Excerpt from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse_of_April_8,_2024:

 

The solar eclipse of April 8, 2024, was a total solar eclipse visible across a band covering parts of North America, from Mexico to Canada and crossing the contiguous United States. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby obscuring the Sun. A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is larger than the Sun's, blocking all direct sunlight. Totality occurs only in a limited path across Earth's surface, with the partial solar eclipse visible over a larger surrounding region.

 

The Moon's apparent diameter was 5.5% larger than average. With a magnitude of 1.0566, the eclipse's longest duration of totality was 4 minutes and 28.13 seconds just 4 mi (6 km) north of the Mexican town of Nazas, Durango.

 

This eclipse was the first total solar eclipse visible from Canada since February 26, 1979; the first over Mexico since July 11, 1991;[3] and the first over the United States since August 21, 2017. No other solar eclipse in the 21st century will be totally visible from all three countries. The next total solar eclipse in the US will be on March 30, 2033, which will pass over Alaska; the next total eclipse in the lower 48 states of the US will be on August 23, 2044; and the next total eclipse of similar width will take place on August 12, 2045 (traversing coast-to-coast similar to the 2017 eclipse).

 

The final solar eclipse of the year will occur on October 2, 2024.

Our last total solar eclipse in Europe this century (11-8-1999)

Totality darted in and out of visibility in cloudy Texas

Nail biter cleared clouded cleared again then settled on cloudy with the eclipse just visible through the clouds and even then it darted in and out of the dense clouds during totality.

 

Captured with a Questar telescope and a Nikon Z7II. Quite a bit of AI processing has been used to coax as much as possible from this cloudy image. Kept my laptop thinking for a while and updated.

 

This is the first time I have had to photograph an eclipse degraded by thick clouds and just visible. It is a bit like looking through frosted glass, but the one very surprising result for me is at the bottom of the Sun with the prominences and how the brilliant red lit up the obsuring cloud red- this I have not seen before. This photo to my eye is close to what I saw with the brilliant red prominences and the cloud squelched corona.

Svalbard, Norway, 20.03.2015

 

from Vancouver, WA. At peak and only about 86% at our lattitude.

3:13PM

 

The 2024 solar eclipse is at totality.

 

The world stands still as Northwest Ohio descends into complete darkness. Like a light flicked off in a bright room, the mid-day sky turns to night as the moon crosses the threshold of a coveted total solar eclipse. Stars appear in the daytime sky, nocturnal birds begin to chirp, and a 360-degree 'sunset ' lights the horizon on fire. The ancient B&O CPL bracket at SE Ottawa gives a high-green to southbound M277 in one of the most breathtaking compositions I've ever had the fortune of aiming a camera at. It's been 218 years since Ohio last experienced totality, and in those roughly 3 minutes and 20 seconds, a truly divine experience was lived.

  

See ya in 2099

A slightly different take on the eclipse, as I was running for a train with luggage I had no big zoom lens or tripod so I focused on the trees in the foreground.

No doubt there will be lots of similar shots on here today but this is my take.

 

Canon 7d - with 200mm lens plus 2X extender. I used a ten stop filter plus 3 stop ND to give me a 1/320th sec exposure at F16.

 

Cropped and minimal processing

 

Taken this morning in Edinburgh.

 

Adirondack_Park, NY

A gap in the clouds. Sun and moon.

 

( Taken in the region of Trier, Germany )

The trees were casting odd shadows during the solar eclipse on Monday. If you look closely you can see dozens of eclipse shadows on the ground from the light between leaves on the trees!

I wish I was a little more prepared to take photos of the Eclipse. I didn't have a solar filter but I lucked out when these clouds rolled in.

Total eclipse as viewed from south Saint Louis, Mo.

Solar Eclipse onJanuary 4, 2011

Credit: ESO/Dss2, Giuseppe Donatiello

 

127ED f/9 afocal

On Monday, August 21, 2017, all of North America was treated to an eclipse of the sun.

 

Partial Solar Eclipse seen from Chicago, IL

Taken Handheld

 

Night vs Day. The Eternal Battle.

Partial SolarEclipse Jun 10th. 2021

Lucky enough to capture the Dimond Ring effect and some tiny prominences of the solar eclipse while at work this afternoon.

 

Thanks for View, Fave and Comment!

It happened...August 21, 2017...the great solar eclipse. I knew we would be in Maine. I did research on how to photograph it and read all kinds of warnings about sensor damage if you did not use a solar filter...there was no time for me to buy a filter and practice. Then I read Apple said it was okay to use your Apple products to photograph the eclipse. I was still skeptical...so took a very fast photo with the camera in selfie mode...didn't really look at the screen...hit the button...got my man....kissed by the eclipse :-) How special is that? LOL

Eclipse on 20.03.2015

one of my faves. Solar eclipse in puerto vallarta. Cloudy day, The sun broke for literally 2 minutes, long enough for this.

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