Orionid Meteor Shower Last Saturday Morning (HD Timelapse Video) The Orionid Meteor Shower this year was a bit of a dud. I was shooting up at 11,000 feet in the White Mountains and ran my camera for about 4 hours, from 10:40pm Friday until 2:50am, well after the moon came up. To see how a much more active meteor shower looks, here's one of my Perseid Meteor Shower videos from the same location, displayed on the Discover Magazine blog, best viewed full screen: Perseids, Writ Large http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2009/08/25/perseids-writ-large/ I have a number of posts on my blog www.MyPhotoGuides.com * related to night shooting and timelapse videos. Here's one of the more recent ones building on those pasts posts: Create a Timelapse Video of a Meteor Shower http://activesole.blogspot.com/2011/08/create-timelapse-video-of-meteor-shower.html I'm curious to see how an HD 720P video gets displayed on G+. I have a ton of timelapse footage that I haven't foun...
Hi
ReplyDeleteHi how are you?
ReplyDeleteGood
ReplyDeleteBellĂsimo!
ReplyDeletePlease unfrend me
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shot...!!!
ReplyDeleteVery cool Jeff! I see the EXIF is 200mm did you use a tele extender as well?
ReplyDeleteVery beautiful sky.
ReplyDeleteMto lindo esse céu estrelado.
ReplyDeleteBeauty. Photo
ReplyDeleteBeautiful to see
ReplyDeleteJohn Getchel. It was shot at 200mm on a Canon 70D, so the effective focal length was 320 mm. If I had added a teleconverter, the tail of the comet would have been chopped off.
ReplyDeleteMatthew St.Pierre Ha! Made me look. I'm not one of hte 8 people who have you circled, so I cannot unfirend you.
ReplyDeleteAh cool! A definite advantage of a crop sensor!
ReplyDeleteEXIF says 25 sec. Did you use a tracker to shoot this? Seems like you shouldn't be able to get more than 2-3 seconds at 200mm before blurring. Beautiful shot.
ReplyDeleteNever mind. I clicked on the blog link in the post, where you explain that you did indeed use a star tracker.
ReplyDeleteJim Reitz On the same night I also shot with a 16-35 mm lens at 24 mm focal length, with no star tracker:
ReplyDeletehttps://plus.google.com/+JeffreySullivan/posts/DGGW4CTGp26
The comet's smaller of course, but I still find it cool to capture in landscape-scale shots. Now if I could just get the clouds to stay away for a few nights...
Cool shot, Jeff! Phillip Colla and I are going to try to head to some dark skies this week to try our luck.
ReplyDeleteYou definitely should Garry McCarthy. I saw it a couple of nights ago with my eyes (unaided), then through binoculars. It looks like a white fuzzy ball. I hope to catch it on a clear night or two this week to see if the tail has lengthened and/or brightened.
ReplyDeleteUnimaginable comet Lovejoy _ white light sournding blue colour light and trailing mild beem light and in numerous gilltering stars. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful shot!
ReplyDeleteNossa amo olhar para o ceu ..ver as estrelas. ..aqui demais. ..sampa nĂŁo da para ver...
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone! Here's an updated image of Comet Lovejoy, as of last night:
ReplyDeletehttps://plus.google.com/107459220492917008623/posts/KMjDHzdJC7w
It's currently near the star cluster Pleiades (high overhead at 8:30 pm in mid northern latitudes), and it should remain bright over the next few nights.
Nossa que privilégio vc viu tudo isso....
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