View allAll Photos Tagged perseids
Time lapse done with Gopro Hero 5.
Milky way barely visible due to light pollution based on my location.
Part of a set of photos from a late night shoot in search of the Perseids shooting stars. This one of the star filled skies over Burnham Overy Staithe in Norfolk 11/8/15
Imaging telescopes or lenses: Tokina 11-16 f/2.8 Tokina
Imaging cameras: Nikon D7000 (unmodified)
Guiding telescopes or lenses: Tokina 11-16 f/2.8 Tokina
Software: Photoshop CS 6 Adobe, Noel Carboni's Astro Tools for PhotoShop Noel Carboni Actions, PIXINSIGHT PixInsinght 1.8 RC7
Resolution: 2416x3004
Dates: Aug. 13, 2015
Frames: 15x30" ISO2500
Integration: 0.1 hours
Avg. Moon age: 28.02 days
Avg. Moon phase: 2.58%
Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 4.00
Temperature: 16.00
RA center: 43.850 degrees
DEC center: 59.689 degrees
Pixel scale: 61.522 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 104.260 degrees
Field radius: 32.943 degrees
Locations: Home Base, Cheyenne, WY (elevation: 6014'), United States
Description
Dogging clouds, I finally got a break between midnight to 4AM, my 30 sec exposures at iso 2500 managed to capture about 3 dozen Perseid and 1 Aquariids (noted in top left hand). The Aquariids was traveling slow at 1st magnitude. Based on this, I estimate the brighter Perseid meteors are between 0 and -2 magnitude (nice transition from green to red as it entered the atmosphere). Most left smoke trains of a few seconds. This composite was from 15 30-sec frames. Used Nikon d7000, Tokina 11-16mm used at f/2.8 and set at 16mm.
Yellow "x" at center is the approximate radiant point.
A Perseid meteor captured on the 12th of August at 23:31 from the Lammermuirs, alongside the Milky Way. I didn't think I had caught any meteors until I finally went through the photos today to see how the Milky Way turned out! Photo is unprocessed, as usual ;-)
a green Perseid and a shorty, 2 satellites, I think the Perseid's were fun to watch but clouds were annoying
August 20, 2016
Kekaha, Kaua`i
Nikon D750 w/ Nikon 14-24 lens @ 14mm
Shutter speed 25 secs, ISO 4000
A Perseid meteor like an arrow shot straight toward the Pleiades star cluster.
Seen in Murieston, West Lothian. All 5 or 6 meteors seemed to be in this region, to the right of the radiant.
Samyang 14mm @f4. Cropped.
PENTAX K-3 + SIGMA 17-70mm DC MACRO ISO800 22s 17mm F/3.5 Aug 15,2015 Hirakata-shi,Osaka
【ペルセウス座流星群】
あまり明るいのは写せませんでした。上が流星、下は人工衛星です。
Three hours of Perseids meteor shower taken on Tmax 100 with a . six-20 portrait brownie I count four.
This is looking roughly east, and I tried to make them all fit as stars trailing, but not convinced. I was asleep for this one, just woke up to close the shutter. The light leak on the left could be my bleary eyed torch work reflecting off a tent pole. (or just sloppy film handling) Either way the rest of the film was surprisingly clear.
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Tmax in rodinal (1,25)
Broken my laptop so processed on a tiny screened notebook running lubuntu. Good set of software but felt like I was wearing oven gloves, I was miles out with the crop.
I left some of the harder to reach dust hanging around trying to pass itself off as bits of galaxy...
Perseid meteor shower last night. Only managed a few captures of the dozen I saw from 1-3am. The anticipated show didn't pan out in PHX.
Was out in Porteau cove to check out the perseid meteor shower and setup this star trail photo. It is a series of 25' exposures for about 2 hours. You can see a few of the meteors that cut thru the image on the left side
Set up the camera at the top of the house late last night in the hope of catching the Perseid meteor shower. Good weather - with few clouds - but I couldn't see any meteor showers. Perhaps the London light was too strong.
So I amused myself by taking a few photos of late-night planes coming into land at Heathrow, snapping the starburst from the red crane in the background, and the flare from the moon, just out of frame at the top.
Anyway, this morning I processed the photos, and surprise, surprise....on this one photo - and this one only - I saw these small light streaks on the left, the top and behind the plane trail. The meteors had arrived!
Taken with a Super-Takumar 85/1.9, stopped fully down, for 25 seconds.
Taken at Keilder Observatory of the Milky Way and a lucky Perseid Meteor passed just at the right time.
One of the unexpected highlights from the summer cruise was seeing this Perseid meteor.
It had been a long day on the water (about 10 1/2 hours) of which the last hour was probably our worst experience ever on the water. We were in Johnstone Strait when it turned into a very wild ride.
We had about an hour of a rodeo on the water when we were able to get out of the strait and into a calm bay.
I was preparing dinner in the calm and magnificently beautiful Billgoat Bay, BC, when I looked out the window and saw something streaking in the sky. I grabbed my camera and started shooting. I didn't know what it was at the time, but knew it was something I hadn't seen before.
In a brief moment of cell service, I found out what it was and realized the peak meteor shower would be happening on the next two nights.
The following night, I stayed up very late after the moon finally set and snuggled under a blanket on the bow of the boat watching the show. I never did see another meteor as bright or as close as this one. They were more like very distant shooting stars.
What a day of experiencing nature!
I'll soon be sharing more of my summer favorites. Thanks for your support and patience while I was away. I'm slowing trying to catch up. :)
Shot for about an 30 minutes and was able to stitch the few meteors captured into my favorite frame. Thunderstorms are expected for my area for a while to come, so I figured I would grab the camera and watch the one last clear sky. It was four days or so from the peak, but I definitely was seeing a nice amount!
Canon 6D + Rokinon 24mm @ f/2
Single exposure + meteors from multiple images.
I was watching the meteor shower and photographing when i saw flickering light on the fields. I quickly turned around and saw a large fireball meteor. the trail hung in the sky long enough for me to swing my tripod around and take several 30s exp before it dissipated!
Tarde!
Mani da semana :)
Começando pela filha única, resolvi estrear meu lindo Perseid da Illamasqua e caguei total :( Não sei se foi o meu acabamento que ficou ruim ou se o esmalte é assim mesmo. Passei só uma camada dele, porque ele é super concentrado, e finalizei com uma camada generosa de Base Glitter e Seche. Não curti. Achei que ficou áspero e sem brilho :( Faz parte.
Nas demais, usei três (!!!!) camadas desse azul lindo que estou apaixonada, o Amo/Sou da Preta Gil. Não curti o nome. hahahah Mas a cor é simplesmente d-i-v-i-n-a. Na foto não aparece, mas ele tem uma pegada roxa incrível. Amei! Também finalizei com Seche.
Muito amor pela mani, e um pouco menos de amor pela filha única. hahahah
Besos