A 360° panorama of the winter sky over Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, on February 28, 2017. The Milky Way arches across the sky from south (left) to northeast (right). The Zodiacal Light stretches up from the western horizon at centre. The Gegenschein is faintly visible above the horizon at far left in Leo. Orion is left of centre; the Pleiades sit at the tip of the Zodiacal Light pyramid of light. The ground is lit only by starlight. No artificial illumination or light painting applied. This is a stitch of 6 segments taken with the 12mm full-fame fish-eye Rokinon lens at f/2.8, all 30-second exposures with the Nikon D750 at ISO 6400. The camera was aimed portrait with the segments at 60° spacings. Stitched with PTGui using equirectangular projection with the zeith pulled down slightly.
A 360° fish-eye scene of the winter sky from home in southern Alberta, with Orion rising into the southeast at bottom, and Venus bright as an evening “star” in the west at right. The Big Dipper is low in the northeast at upper left. The Milky Way runs across the sky from northwest where summer stars are setting to the southeast where the winter stars are rising. Sirius is just rising behind the distant trees at lower left. Overhead are the autumn constellations of Cassiopeia. Andromeda, and Perseus. Below centre is the Pleiades and stars of Taurus. Some faint Zodiacal light is visible at right in the southwest, near Venus but competes with the haze and lights from towns to the west. This is a stitch of 6 segments taken with the Rokinon 12mm full-frame fish-eye lens, landscape orientation, and Nikon D750, in a test of the lens’s ability to shoot horizon to zenith pans in this mode. At f/2.8 and ISO 3200 for 25 seconds each, untracked. Stitched with PTGui. The original is 8300 pixels wide.
A 360° panorama of he winter sky and Milky Way at Dinosaur Provincial Park in southern Alberta, on a very clear night, February 28, 2017. The Milky Way stretches across the sky from south (bottom) to northwest (at top right). The Zodiacal Light stretches up from the horizon in the west at right, and can be traced faintly across the sky to the east (at left) where there is a dim glow of Gegenschein visible. The view is looking south and in this scene the galactic anti-centre is near the centre of the image — i.e. we are looking toward the outer edge of the Galaxy, to the outer spiral arms opposite the galactic centre in Sagittarus, visible in summer. Orion is at bottom centre, almost due south. North is at top. This is a stitch of 6 segments with the 12mm Rokinon lens at f/2.8 for 30 seconds each, with the Nikon D750 at ISO 6400, mounted portrait. Stitched with PTGui.