Four naked-eye planets arrayed across the dawn sky on July 4, 2020: Venus to the left, Mars at centre, and the pairing of Saturn and Jupiter at right above the old house. Noctilucent clouds light northeastern sky at left, while normal clouds are at right. Mercury was too close to the Sun to see at this time. This is a panorama of 12 segments with the 35mm lens and Canon 6D MkII stitched in two parts with Adobe Camera Raw.
A likely display of noctilucent clouds at dawn on July 4, 2020 from home in a panorama of 6 segments with the 35mm lens and Canon 6D MkII. Venus has just appeared above the cloudline at centre.
A panorama of the bright and extensive noctilucent clouds across the north on July 2, 2020 as shot from home in southern Alberta. Capella and the stars of Perseus are right of centre. This is a panorama of 10 segments shot with the 85mm Rokinon lens on the Canon 6D MkII camera at ISO 100 for 4 seconds each, and taken at 10° spacings which made it possible for Adobe Camera Raw to stitch the segments. The original is almost 30,000 pixels wide.