Hansemand
Elder
He's looking at you kid.
Posts: 5,466
|
Post by Hansemand on Oct 6, 2008 12:51:43 GMT -5
Thanks, it was also a pretty lucky shot i did, the rest did not come out so good, due to the very heavy clouds that night. But then it was there: A small hole in the clouds, where the entire Moon was clear of clouds and gave this image.
|
|
|
Post by Wiccan One on Oct 6, 2008 15:54:38 GMT -5
Wow, the first picture is amazing, especially seeing as though the craters are so clear! I took two pictures of the moon earlier this year, it looked like the sun it was so bright: Click 1Click 2That light above it was my light reflecting off the glass. >_>
|
|
Hansemand
Elder
He's looking at you kid.
Posts: 5,466
|
Post by Hansemand on Oct 7, 2008 5:47:59 GMT -5
Pretty cool pictures anyway wiccanone. I know of reflections, my older camera also sometimes made this, but luckily me my new one does not, because the glass has a coating that prevents it. It also uses several focusing points when taking night pictures, thats why the first ones of the Moon and its craters came out so clear, it adjusted itself to take pictures threw my monocular.
Interesting is it that it also captured the blue spectrum of the light, when the Sun's light bounces of the Moon. I guess its from when the light passes threw Earth's Ozone layer, that also makes the sky look blue during the day.
|
|
Hansemand
Elder
He's looking at you kid.
Posts: 5,466
|
Post by Hansemand on Jul 6, 2009 8:29:46 GMT -5
Not exactly the moon, but another spacial object that is fully visible with the naked eye this time of year: Planet Venus. Here in Denmark it is fully visible in the early morning 2am to 6am when the sun comes up, taken July 4th at 2:16am.
|
|