Circumpolar star trails on a moonlit night in the Gila National Forest in southern New Mexico, north of Pinos Altos. Polaris is at upper left, the Little Dipper hanging below it, and the stars of the Big Dipper are rising at right, with the end star of the handle still to clear the horizon. Illumination is from the waxing quarter Moon. The night had a lot of high cloud drifting through, adding the streaks and patchiness to the sky. This is a stack of 80 exposures, each 45 seconds with the 24mm lens at f/4 and Canon 6D at ISO 1600. The foreground comes from a single frame, the first, to minimize blurring and contrast loss from using a foreground blended from 80 shots taken over an hour while the Moon and shadows moved. The last frame was enhanced with larger star glows to punch up the appearance of the end stars and pattern of the Dipper. Stacking was performed with the Star Circle Academy’s Advanced Stacker Actions, using the Long Streaks effect.
A composite of 5 frames from a 200-frame time-lapse attempting to record the Leonid meteor shower in 2014. 5 Leonids are recorded here near centre where Leo is rising in the east. Jupiter is the bright object at lower right. One bright sporadic meteor is at far left not part of the meteor shower. The Big Dipper is at left as well, with the handle having jusr risen. The green is from airglow. While the Leonid meteors shown here were recorded over a two hour period, the stars are from the last frame of the set of five, so the meteors are not positioned with respect to the rising radiant point but with respect to the sky on the fixed camera. Each frame was 30 seconds at ISO 4000 with the Canon 6D and 14mm lens at f/2.8. Taken from near Silver City, New Mexico.
Aurora over grain bins at harvest time, Sept, 26/27, 2014. I shot this from near home, using the Canon 5D MkII and 16-35mm lens at f/2.8 and ISO 3200 for 30 seconds.