View allAll Photos Tagged solareclipse2015
**Explore: June 2, 2014
Taken through my Solar Telescope- (Coronado Solar Max 60 II). The high flares in the 2 o'clock position extend about 72,000 miles out into space which would be the same height as 9 Earths stacked on top each other.
Right place... right time.
A shot from early this morning of the partial eclipse with a very well placed Seagull.
Taken from Holkham Beach, Norfolk. This was unfiltered as the cloud was pretty thick.
Photos of the eclipse taken near the beautiful waterfall of iceland Gullfoss. It was an amazing morning watching the partial eclipse through the tiny welding glass i had with me and even more amazing when i got home and saw these photos. Thanks to the almighty weather gods that gave us clear sky's to see this beautiful thing
The 2015 eclipse of the sun viewed from Caddington, Luton, Bedfordshire.
More photos of the eclipse here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/sets/72157651047074498/
More photos of the moon here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/sets/72157649181409848/
my fave
Group:
www.flickr.com/groups/bbcskyatnight/pool/
BBC Sky at Night and Stargazing
This is the official BBC Flickr group for The Sky At Night and Stargazing Live.
BBC Sky at Night and Stargazing Live group photos on Flickriver
This group exists to showcase the best astronomy images and help less experienced photographers find inspiration and guidance from the more accomplished. Please welcome members with all levels of ability.
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Outstanding images from this group may be featured in BBC programmes, websites or magazines, and will be credited wherever possible.
I drove to Porlock Hill in search of clear skies this morning. I arrived there just before the eclipse started and spent the next few hours watching the eclipse. I was high enough to cut out most of the haze which left me with great visibility.
Since I only had a 200mm lens, decided to go with this composite image of the whole eclipse - from around 8:30 to 10:40.
This is a composite image of all the seperate images I took during the recent solar eclipse on March 20th 2015. These were taken from The Lough in Cork. I opened all the images in photoshop and aligned them in a sequence so you could see how it progressed. Originally I did this with more "under-exposed" images that just showed the eclipse, but when I imported these shots that were a little "over-exposed" I thought the detail in the clouds that came with them looked really cool so I left it in. This was not faked in any way.The only use of photoshop was to align the exposures in the sequence you see.
Got lucky with the weather this morning for the eclipse. Here's the sun reappearing from behind the moon
Sometimes it's difficult to comprehend just how small and insignificant we really are. The sight of our moon, a huge ball of rock passing quietly in front of our sun, the giver of life, monstrous fireball, is just... humbling. Wonderful!
Taken at ScoutMoor Windfarm, Norden, Rochdale, UK
The Solar Eclipse in Milan: this is all I could get with my poor cam (through a colour negative).
When the eclipse occurred in 1990, I was in Finland and I remember that the strongest experience was, when all the birds stopped singing, a total silence with the dusk.
Now nothing special feeling, because in Milan all the sounds of environment were normal, just sounds of traffic.
And it was so small eclipse that not the real dusk either...
Solar Eclipse seen in Władysławowo near Puck, Poland
Canon EOS 60D+TAMRON SP 500 mm 1:8 TELE MACRO BBAR MC 55BB
Partial eclipse composite, put together from a sequence of photos taken in the garden this morning. The misty cloud was actually a gift because it really helped cut down the light. The next picture in the sequence was completely burnt out as the cloud quickly melted away leaving the final part of the eclipse in clear blue skies.
young people have seen the eclipse for the first time (after several minutes of failed attempts with a wrong type of filter)
One of the few glimpses of full eclipse, right toward the end, with light approching from the right as the shadow passes by. All the rain from the shower we had earlier is still visible in the sunset-like horizon.