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08/09/2005 01:35:58 PM · #1 |
Hi all,
Two more shots. I spent a night in the northwoods of Wisconsin where it's REALLY dark. Shot another milky way shot:
And for fun, put the camera on a stationary tripod aimed at Polaris, and set the remote timer to snap a 20 second exposure every 2 minutes. I put the resulting 20 images into an animated GIF. Instead of star trails, I shot a circumpolar movie. Link is below. Bandwidth warning, the animated GIF is 2.6 meg in size so be patient while the whole thing loads:
clickity-click
Message edited by author 2005-08-09 22:48:52. |
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08/09/2005 01:38:48 PM · #2 |
Very cool. Whereabouts in Wisconsin was this? |
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08/09/2005 01:39:41 PM · #3 |
Left a comment. Is this kind of shot hard to do? Could a 300D do it?
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08/09/2005 01:41:26 PM · #4 |
MK: Chequamagon forest, about 30 miles south of Ashland (about 6 hours straight north of Madison)
Odyssey: Yes, a 300d could do this easily, but you'd need a telescope that has a tracking motor to mount your camera to. This cancels out the earth's rotation so the stars don't trail and the milky way can saturate. |
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08/09/2005 01:49:51 PM · #5 |
Originally posted by strangeghost: MK: Chequamagon forest, about 30 miles south of Ashland (about 6 hours straight north of Madison)
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Neat. I'm headed up to Hayward next week which looks to be about 30 miles south of where you were. But I have no telescope. :( |
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08/09/2005 02:24:41 PM · #6 |
That is so cool. I love the animated shots. Someday (I hope), I will be able to afford a big boy camera and try some of those shots. Till then, I will just admire others. Thanks for sharing!!
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08/09/2005 02:31:51 PM · #7 |
Kind of a amature astronomer my self. Love the shot added it to my favs.
Did you use an Eq mount? |
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08/09/2005 03:12:56 PM · #8 |
Thanks for the Fav Fibre. And to other commenters, yes, it was on an equatorial mounted, my telescope, with a drive to compensate for earth's rotation. Here are a few other shots from my portfolio. |
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08/09/2005 07:31:05 PM · #9 |
Hee hee, I posted this in the other thread, but it was a thread killer. Maybe it will do better here...
This was taken in central Wisconsin with a Canon 15mm fisheye lens and a standard tripod (no tracking). Six exposures were combined. A larger version is here, (clicking "original" will bring up the largest size).
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08/09/2005 07:38:21 PM · #10 |
Originally posted by kirbic: Hee hee, I posted this in the other thread, but it was a thread killer. Maybe it will do better here...
This was taken in central Wisconsin with a Canon 15mm fisheye lens and a standard tripod (no tracking). Six exposures were combined. A larger version is here, (clicking "original" will bring up the largest size). |
Nice Job especially with no tracking.
I wish it was dark enough at nights around here to try this. There is a street light everywhere here unless I drive 30 minutes to get to the country. |
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08/09/2005 07:49:31 PM · #11 |
Originally posted by SDW65: There is a street light everywhere here unless I drive 30 minutes to get to the country. |
Would shooting near a street light destroy the shot? |
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08/09/2005 08:05:04 PM · #12 |
I was wondering, has anyone shot with the 20Da? The 20D for astrophotography that has a weaker IR filter and some other enhancements specifically for astrophotography?
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08/09/2005 08:08:30 PM · #13 |
Originally posted by singe: Originally posted by SDW65: There is a street light everywhere here unless I drive 30 minutes to get to the country. |
Would shooting near a street light destroy the shot? |
They are very bright here. With the eye I may see 1% of the stars you see in kirbic photo because of the light. If the sky clears tonight I may try it and see. |
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08/09/2005 09:15:43 PM · #14 |
Superb shot Fritz, considering you had to work without a tracking mount. My Peleng fisheye should be here any day now. What about the GTG we've been planning?? |
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08/09/2005 09:24:13 PM · #15 |
Originally posted by Spazmo99: I was wondering, has anyone shot with the 20Da? The 20D for astrophotography that has a weaker IR filter and some other enhancements specifically for astrophotography? |
I have seen some new owners discussing the 20Da over on digital astro, but haven't really trolled for any shots yet. I have a few friends here in the Madison area who are superb astrophotographers who I assume will be getting this camera soon. I'm anxious to see how it performs. |
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