View allAll Photos Tagged totaleclipse
Third contact Diamond Ring with prominences. Wyoming, USA.
Shot at about 428mm at f/5.6 with a 1.4x teleconverter and a (rented) D7200, giving approx 900mm equivalent field of view.
Copyright © 2017 by Adam Warren. All rights reserved. Protected by Pixsy.
- Total Eclipse {Dressed Up} by Fiddle-Dee-Dee
- To The Moon by Forever Joy
- FONT = Kristen ITC + Ribeye Marrow
Early stages of the April 2024 total eclipse over North Texas.
April 8, 2024.
Grand Prairie, Texas. Dallas County.
Nikon D850. AF-S Nikkor 500mm f/5.6E PF ED VR.
Seymour Solar 95mm ND5 (0.3 stop) Helios solar glass filter.
f/8 @ 1/400 sec. (+1.3 EV) ISO 100.
Eclipse in Birmingham on the morning of 20th March 2014. A few shots from across the city in various locations.
This is the tiniest fragment peeking out after totality--and already overwhelming my phone's camera.
Graph showing the solar power generation levels from our house during the total eclipse. Unlike last year's partial eclipse where the power declined but never reached zero, the total eclipse resulted in several minutes that were entirely dark. We could see the stars at 1:45pm as clearly as we do at night, and power output dropped entirely to zero during the totality.
Early stages of the April 2024 total eclipse over North Texas.
April 8, 2024.
Grand Prairie, Texas. Dallas County.
Nikon D850. AF-S Nikkor 500mm f/5.6E PF ED VR.
Seymour Solar 95mm ND5 (0.3 stop) Helios solar glass filter.
f/8 @ 1/400 sec. (+1.3 EV) ISO 100.
Total Solar Eclipse August 21st, 2017 at the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose's Rose Garden neighborhood
The temperature dropped, the cicadas and crickets started chirping and daylight plunged into darkness. Even some stars became visible (there is a star or planet just to the left of the frame).
Ending stages of the April 2024 total eclipse over North Texas after totality.
April 8, 2024.
Grand Prairie, Texas. Dallas County.
Nikon D850. AF-S Nikkor 500mm f/5.6E PF ED VR.
Seymour Solar 95mm ND5 (0.3 stop) Helios solar glass filter.
f/8 @ 1/400 sec. (+1.3 EV) ISO 100.
January 21, 2019
The January 20/21 total lunar eclipse, blood moon in progress. My camera clock was off by 1 hour, 0 minutes and 50 seconds, so this image is actually taken at roughly an hour and a minute earlier than EXIF states.
A cool thing about this eclipse was that a Meteor hit the Blood Moon at exactly 11:41:10 (Reports differ, but it is 11:41: something.)
Grand Summit Hotel
Attitash Mountain
White Mountains National Forest
Bartlett, New Hampshire - USA
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2019
All Rights Reserved
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