http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090314.html wrote:
Explanation: Sirius, alpha star of Canis Major, traces the bright arc over the dome at the left.
Astronomer Alexandre Santerne also briefly illuminated a foreground oak tree during the exposure sequence.
aristarchusinexile wrote:Circular Universal Product Code.
bhrobards wrote:I have never seen a photo quite like this one. Why do the stars not follow parallel paths? Is it the focal length of the lens?
bhrobards wrote:I have never seen a photo quite like this one. Why do the stars not follow parallel paths? Is it the focal length of the lens?
BMAONE23 wrote:bhrobards wrote:I have never seen a photo quite like this one. Why do the stars not follow parallel paths? Is it the focal length of the lens?
I believe the appearance is due to the use of a wide angle lens. The straight star trails follow the equatorial path with those on curved paths being stars both north and south of the equator
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish-eye_lens wrote:
The first types of fisheye lenses to be developed were "circular fisheyes" — lenses which took in a 180° hemisphere and projected this as a circle within the film frame. Some circular fisheyes were available in orthographic projection models for scientific applications.
lkistler wrote:I'm curious as to why 300 1-minute exposures were chosen as the methodology for taking this superb composite. Why not some other combination of longer exposures? Can the photographer explain his/her rationale please?
DavidLeodis wrote:The line in the explanation to this APOD that states "Brilliant planet Venus makes the short bright trail at the lower right, while trails of stars in the end near the lower right observatory dome." seems to have something missing!
cloudwalker_3 wrote:Know about aiming for the north star so that part I've got, however it's the exposure that I stuggle with.
I created an image with a single exposure of some eight hours at Christmas, but the only streaks were fairly minimal. I'm assuming that the key, as with Alexandre Santerne's picture, (does anyone have contact details for him by the way?) so to do several exposures with small gaps in between. What should these gaps be? 30 Seconds? 1 Minute? More?
cloudwalker_3 wrote:For what it's worth, the image I tried to get was taken in my parents garden. They live in the countryside and there's minimal light polution so the sky was inky black. Having said this, I totally appreciate the point you're making about the sky being there for eight hours. In terms of stacking exposures, how long would you recommend leaving between them? Does the time of year/location on the globe matter?
bhrobards wrote:Without knowing, it would seem a pinhole camera would be a equivalent to a normal lense. This image is not a fisheye but the distorsion of the left dome and leaning tree make it seem wide. I realized the longest parallel lines were in the center, corner to corner.So, wide lense aimed at the celestial equator?
DavidLeodis wrote:The line in the explanation to this APOD that states "Brilliant planet Venus makes the short bright trail at the lower right, while trails of stars in the end near the lower right observatory dome." seems to have something missing!
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