Astro Timelapse I
Posted: Mon 02 Sep 2013, 14:39
Another timelapse video, this time of the evening skies above Thetford in Norfolk. Flickr has unfortunately introduced blockiness into the opening seconds and I sadly ran out of battery after only a couple of hours but I'm still pleased it worked.
The images for this were bulk edited in ACR to remove the worst of the light pollution (most visible on the clouds) but you can also see the impact of my broken 10-22 lens... the bottom half of the frame is noticeably less sharp than the top half so I think I'll need to find a local repairman to fix it in time for my next holiday.
Things of interest are the milky way near the top of the frame (moving out of shot), a particularly bright meteor early on (the individual frame will likely be my 365 shot for the day) with another fainter one later. Not to mention 2 or 3 airplanes, numerous hot pixels on my sensor (or perhaps geosynchronous satellites, I need to check their locations to be sure) and best of all the Andromeda galaxy. Barely visible at the beginning, it's a fuzzy blob that is nearing the centre of the image with about 5 seconds to go - imagine the image as a clock face, it's at about the 8.30 mark. This is our nearest galactic neighbour at 2.5 million light years distant. I've been trying to get a snap of it for ages but London is particularly crappy in terms of light pollution and has always thwarted me! The Pleiades open star cluster just sneaks into the bottom left hand corner in the last couple of frames too.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cedarsphot ... likes_hd=1
Once I get the chance to go to a dark sky site in the UK I want to try this again with some interesting foreground
The images for this were bulk edited in ACR to remove the worst of the light pollution (most visible on the clouds) but you can also see the impact of my broken 10-22 lens... the bottom half of the frame is noticeably less sharp than the top half so I think I'll need to find a local repairman to fix it in time for my next holiday.
Things of interest are the milky way near the top of the frame (moving out of shot), a particularly bright meteor early on (the individual frame will likely be my 365 shot for the day) with another fainter one later. Not to mention 2 or 3 airplanes, numerous hot pixels on my sensor (or perhaps geosynchronous satellites, I need to check their locations to be sure) and best of all the Andromeda galaxy. Barely visible at the beginning, it's a fuzzy blob that is nearing the centre of the image with about 5 seconds to go - imagine the image as a clock face, it's at about the 8.30 mark. This is our nearest galactic neighbour at 2.5 million light years distant. I've been trying to get a snap of it for ages but London is particularly crappy in terms of light pollution and has always thwarted me! The Pleiades open star cluster just sneaks into the bottom left hand corner in the last couple of frames too.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cedarsphot ... likes_hd=1
Once I get the chance to go to a dark sky site in the UK I want to try this again with some interesting foreground