View allAll Photos Tagged totaleclipse
Capturing the Full Moon moving into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
All the hype about seeing a full solar eclipse? Completely understated. It far exceeded my wildest imagination! So dark that Venus and a handful of stars were visible... so cold my wife abandoned her camera for a jacket! Truly an incredible experience! If you ever have an opportunity... just go experience it!
The Supermoon Eclipse over Vancouver BC January 20, 2019. We were very fortunate not to have a cloudy sky during this infrequently seen event here, although there was some atmospheric haze. The photos were taken with a 2.8 400 mm Nikon lens. This is known as the "wolf moon".
Total Lunar Eclipse September 27, 2015
Canon 60Da, Canon EF 200mm f/2.8 L II USM Telephoto Lens, exposure 4 sec; f/5.6; ISO 640
One more of my eclipse photos, processed to illustrate the "Black Hole Sun" effect that so many remember, while rendering the evanescence and complexity of the solar corona.
HDR blend of 12 images, each image processed to reveal the corona details before blending into a single image. Prominences added back as a separate layer.
1/4000 to 1/2 second exposures
f/6, ISO 200, 480mm
Canon T3i camera
Explore Scientific ED80 APO refractor telescope, 480mm focal length
Celestron Advanced VX mount
Explore Scientific field flattener
Photographed during the April 2024 total solar eclipse, this image captures the breathtaking moment of totality from my parents’ backyard in southern Illinois. The moon fully obscures the sun, unveiling the ethereal glow of the solar corona—an unforgettable scene from one of nature’s most extraordinary events.
If you look closely at the bottom of the eclipse and the right-most edge, you can see the magenta glow of a couple solar flares as well.
Southern Illinois had the unique distinction of being in the path of totality for the 2024 solar eclipse as well as the 2017 solar eclipse.
Time-lapse video of the super-moon eclipse. It was an amazing transformation and incredible event to see.
Capturing the Full Moon moving into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
Although it was quite a cold night with temperatures in the 20's, it was well worth the effort to get out and cover this spectacular event! From start to finish it lasted about 5 hours, and here are 4 of my favorite phases of the 12 that I captured.
Nearing Total Eclipse as the Full Moon moves into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
The lunar eclipse of 07.09.2025. Observe the blue "ozone" band on the right, moments before totality. This is a manually aligned, median stack of ~20 shots. The wind was strong that night and my task wasn't easy on this with a 400 mm lens.
Photography and Licensing: doudoulakis.blogspot.com/
My books concerning natural phenomena / Τα βιβλία μου σχετικά με τα φυσικά φαινόμενα: www.facebook.com/TaFisikaFainomena/
Totale maansverduistering : de maan tussen de sterren in een prachtige rode gloed.
In de vroege ochtend van 28 september was er een totale maansverduistering zichtbaar. Dit viel samen met de zgn. supermaan : hij staat dan dichterbij de aarde en is dus 7% groter aan de hemel dan normaal.
Prachtig om de bloedrode kleur van het gebroken licht van de aardatmosfeer op de maan te zien.
De bewolking werkte maar deels mee, we moesten het doen met "gaten" tussen de wolken. Na 4.30 trok het dicht.
Telescoop : ED102mm / f7.0 (720mm) prime focus.
Total eclips of the moon 28 september 2015. The supermoon was 7% larger dan normaal and the red colour was clearly visible.
Observation was hindered by clouds. After 4.30 we wered clouded out.
Capturing the Full Moon moving into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
An ultra-wide angle view of the total eclipse sky from the Teton Valley, Idaho. The Tetons are at left, still partly in sunlight. The lunar shadow has approached from the west at right and its edge is just past the Sun, ending the diamond ring and starting totality. Venus is at upper right from the Sun. Sirius is a tiny speck at lower right, likely not visible in low-res views on social media. Procyon, Rigel, and Betelegeuse are faintly visible in the original image. ..The horizon had colours mostly to the south. ..This is a single frame from a 660-frame time-lapse of the motion of the lunar shadow, taken with the Nikon D750 and 12mm full-frame Rokinon fish-eye lens.
Feb 26, 1979 - last total solar eclipse of the 20th century.
Mary Hill Museum on the Columbia River at the Washington-Oregon border.
Slide Scan
Well, that was certainly exciting!!! This image shows Baily's Beads, which is the bits of beaded light at the 2 o'clock position. It occurs as the moon almost completely obscures the sun during a solar eclipse, except for the "beads" of light that shine through the lunar topography in some places and not others. Notice the solar flares, arching orange and red around the same area of the beads.
Shot by the coast of Vouliameni, Attica, Greece. Air turbine isle of Saint George may be seen on the horizon, too.
Called "Blood Moon" by star gazers, the red hue is at its peak at total eclipse, caused by the shimmering of sunrises and sunsets seeping through the Earth's atmosphere. This event was observed in an eastern suburb of Melbourne, Australia. This has been processed slightly brighter than it actually appeared.
This image is included in a gallery "Above" curated by Annette LeDuff.
The corona and solar prominences can be seen in this photo of the total eclipse of April 8, 2024, seen from Walnut Ridge, Arkansas.
Total Eclipse begins as the Full Moon moves into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
Near the middle of totality of the Aug 28 2007 lunar eclipse.
More photos from the eclipse to come when I get time.
I like the way this overexposed image came out, this is several minutes before the total eclipse.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mm ED, Canon 6D, single 4 second exposure at ISO 250, unguided. Image date: January 21, 2019. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
Fotodiox was in Nashville, Tennessee on Monday to capture the eclipse! Here's a shot captured with a vintage Danubia 500mm f8 telephoto lens mounted on a Sony A7R II with a Fotodiox T2 to Sony E-mount lens adapter.
Blood Moon, Full Moon, Lunar Eclipse seen amongst the stars in the night sky at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
This was the final view of what was supposed to be an Eclipse. Clouds came and surrounded the sun with some colourful streaks and rays, but the Eclipse never happened in Vancouver, BC, as predicted. Instead the Eclipse headed eastwards from Oregon to Wyoming and all the way to the East Coast. It was a huge disappointment for all here in Vancouver. It does appear from what I read the there were some parts of BC that had a partial Eclipse (i.e., Victoria on the Island and a part of North Vancouver).
One thing of note, however, no actual shadows were seen but a dull sky which was very, very cold as there was no heat from the visible sun. Our air is still full of smoke from the many forest fires and some days it is worse than others.
No editing done on this photo; uploaded as captured on camera.
Annular Eclipse viewed from Technopark, Trivandrum
The solar eclipse of January 15, 2010 is an annular eclipse of the Sun with a magnitude of 0.9190. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partially obscuring Earth's view of the Sun. An annular solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the Sun, causing the sun to look like an annulus (ring), blocking most of the Sun's light. An annular eclipse appears as a partial eclipse over a region thousands of kilometres wide.
It was the longest annular solar eclipse of the millennium, and the longest until December 23, 3043, with a maximum length of 11 mins and 7.8 seconds. (The solar eclipse of January 4, 1992 was longer, at 11 minutes, 41 seconds, occurring in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.)
Title kind of sums it up. I've seen some pretty badass nature things, but this tops the list. Great day in Wood River, NE at the Crane Trust!