View allAll Photos Tagged perseids
A long perseid meteor starring in a shot taken some nights ago with a Sigma circular fisheye lens.
EXIF: Canon 70D, Sigma circular fisheye 4.5 mm f/2.8 @ f/3.2, iso 8k, 30''.
Photography: doudoulakis.blogspot.com/
500px: 500px.com/csath07
More stars, wider lens, but very little meteor action on Wednesday morning of the Perseids meteor shower. A few very faint ones managed to get in a few of the shots, but didn't have much impact on the final result. Need a much more remote location next time. The two gaps in the trails are there because of airplanes passing through the frame.
Dueling Perseids is the last photo i have to share from the Perseids meteor shower on 8-13-12. It is also the most interesting photo from the two nights I spent at Lake Cuyamaca shooting astro time lapse photography.
this is a composite of two photographs frame number 151 and 152 taken during a 4 hour astro time lapse sequence I filmed with my Dynamic Perception stage zero dolly.
watching this in real life it appeared that the top meteor moved down towards the horizon and then turned around and shot back up. it happened so quickly i'm surprised the my camera captured it in two frames.
the slight orange glow in the lower left frame is from the Julian wild fires.
Perseid Meteor Shower 2018 from near Paso Robles. There are 21 Perseid Meteors and 2 random stray meteors stacked together as if they had all occurred at 1:30am. We shot from 9pm on Sunday until 4am on Monday. What a great night!
The two strays are the ones not pointing toward the center of the frame, which is the radiant for the Perseid Meteors. The light pollution is from the Fresno area.
Sony A7S, Samyang 14mm f/2.8 at f/2.8, 20s, ISO12,800. Stacked using the time-shifting technique pioneered by David Kingham: www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7JVwSX1iAg
I eventually managed to capture one of the Perseid meteor shower pictured with Sir John Barrow monument in South Cumbria.
Lots of perseids! It was a great night for shooting and I saw a ton of meteors, there was also a nice moonset on the right of the picture
Canon5d2+samyang14mm f2,8 iso 3200 25s - 3 shots pano
August night spent under starry sky counting perseids as my camera was continious shooting sky, hunting for perseids.
However meteor ativity a few days before the date of maximum was not very high and a couple of brightest meteors i saw that night were not in the cameras field of view -/
Perseid meteor shower from Aug 2013. This was a composite shot from the night. The trees are victims of the Texas drought and the meteors resemble the desperately needed rain drops.
A Perseid Meteor streaks across the sky just before the clouds roll in. Photo was taken just outside of Madrid, Iowa on early morning Sunday 11, 2013
The best photograph that I managed to get of a meteor from the Perseid meteor shower as it passed over Norwich, UK on the night of 13-08-2013.
My first attempt at time lapse photography. I was out hoping to capture the Perseid Meteor Shower, but I got more clouds than meteors, but still a good setting for trying out time lapse. The final product is four hours of photos squeezed into 51 seconds.
A perseid meteor next to Milky way above the church. Unfortunatelly the moon rised early and i had no big luck for more. Not much editing. From omd to mobile LR
For once I was looking in the right direction to catch this Perseid meteor that was almost as bright as Venus for a fraction of a second.
After enjoying sunset and a number of fine meteors at Larch Mountain, and I headed down to Vista House for moonrise over the Columbia River. A very heavy diffuse layer of haze prolonged the moon's deep orange coloration well after moonrise, illuminating the Columbia Gorge with a dark sepia tone (see first comment below). Moonbox. N66268,69 - Happy Moonlight Mondays!
On The Top of Mt. Yarigatake.
Mt. Yarigatake is 3180m, and the one of Japanese famous mountains.
so, this is a miracle!.... i think.
movie:
Lucky shot of a very bright Perseid through a gap in the clouds. Cropped to show the colours on the tail.
I watched the maximum of the Perseid Meteor Shower on Monday Night, and it was a beautiful show. Lost count of how many I saw, but was fortunate enough to capture some faint ones on camera.
This picture is a composite of 14 images and i counted 14 meteors and one plane :). All are marked with a note.
Camera: Canon 550D @ 18mm
Exposure: 20s at ISO 6400