Solar System - Zodiacal Light
Zodiacal Light at Dawn with Venus (Sept 22, 2023)
The morning Zodiacal Light (the subtle glow rising from the left up to top centre) with Venus as a morning star just below the Light. The Zodiacal Light is from sunlight reflecting off dust in the inner solar system and lies along the ecliptic. At this time the orbit of Venus was tipped below the ecliptic by about 4°, placing Venus to the right of the Zodiacal Light here. Venus was just past its point of greatest brilliancy for this morning apparition in late 2023, at magnitude -4.7. This was September 22, 2023. Orion and the winter stars of Procyon and Sirius (just above the clouds) are at right. The star cluster Messier 44, or the Beehive Cluster, in Cancer is above Venus. The stars of Leo including Regulus are just rising below and to the left of Venus. This is a stack of 5 x 1-minute tracked exposures with the Canon RF15-35mm lens at 15mm and at f/2.8 on the Canon R5 at ISO 800. The ground is blurred from the tracking; I did not shoot untracked sharp ground images, preferring here to keep the ground as a dark blurred silhouette. The tracker was the Star Adventurer Mini.
Zodiacal Light on an October Dawn
The Zodiacal Light at dawn on an autumn morning, October 7, 2022. Orion, Sirius, and the winter Milky Way are at right; Mars is the bright object at top right. The Beehive star cluster is at centre embedded in the Light. Leo is rising at left. Bands of airglow tint the sky. This is a stack of 12 x 30-second tracked exposures at ISO 3200 with the Canon R5 and RF15-35mm lens at 15mm and f/2.8. On the Star Adventurer tracker. The ground is a single image to minimize blurring. Taken from home in Alberta, latitude 51° N.
Spring All-Sky Panorama (April 2022)
A 360° "all-sky" panorama of the northern spring sky, taken when the North Galactic Pole was almost due south high in the sky, so we are looking up out of the plane of our galaxy. The Milky Way is visible but only as an arc low across the north, and on this night (April 27, 2022) an arc of a dim green and magenta aurora nicely coincided with the location of the Milky Way. The North Galactic Pole is located just left of the Coma Berenices star cluster below centre. Due south is at bottom; west toward the city is at right; east is at left. The Big Dipper and Ursa Major are directly overhead at centre. Polaris and Ursa Minor/Little Dipper are above centre. Leo is below centre partly in a faint band of Zodiacal Light. The Handle of the Dipper arcs down to yellowish Arcturus, while buish Spica is at bottom low in the south. Vega is rising in the east at left. Capella, and the pair of Castor and Pollux in the winter sky are setting at right. Leo is flanked by the star clusters M44 the Beehive at right and the Coma Berenices Mel111 cluster at left below centre. This is a stitch of 24 segments: 8 segments 45° apart horizontally in 3 tiers 30° apart vertically, for 40 seconds each, with the RF15-35mm lens at 24mm and f/2.8, and Canon EOS Ra at ISO 2000, on the Star Adventurer 2i tracker, using the Alyn Wallace V-plate to place the camera on a horizontal plane for panning around. I moved the camera manually between frames. Stitched with PTGui. Taken from home in southern Alberta at latitude 51° N. The original is 16,500 by 16,500 pixels.
Comet Leonard on December 10 With Zodiacal Light
Comet Leonard (C/2021 A1) on the morning of December 10, 2021, with a 28mm wide-angle lens for a field of view of 65° x 46°. The comet is at far left, in the east, to the left of the bluish band of Zodiacal Light in the southeast in the pre-dawn sky. The Light was fairly obvious to the eye but is partly lost here in the skyglow from the lights of the town of Bassano and with some bands of red airglow as well lighting the sky. Arcturus is at top; Spica is at far right. The Zodiacal Light follows the ecliptic, so with the comet north of the Zodiacal Light, it shows how its orbit was inclined steeply to the ecliptic. The comet was closest to Earth and crossing the ecliptic plane heading south 2 days after the date of this image. Taken about 6:00 am MST. The distinctive cyan tint of a comet's coma is prominent. The comet was in Serpens at the time. This is a stack of 4 x 1-minute exposures at f/2.8 with the 28-70mm Canon RF lens on the Canon EOS Ra camera at ISO 800. The ground comes from a single exposure to minimize blurring. The rest of the sky stacked with a Median stack mode to help eliminate satellite trails. Taken from home in southern Alberta.
The Subtle Glow of Gegenschein
A framing of the faint glow of Gegenschein, or "counterglow," at the point opposite the Sun in the sky, here in Aries and Pisces on this night, October 31, 2021. This glow is from sunlight reflecting off dust particles farther out from Earth in the solar system. The dust might originate from comets or from Mars according to recent research from the NASA Juno probe. The glow is detectable, as it was this night, with the unaided eye, but it is subtle and easy to miss if you do not know what to look for. The camera picks it up better and the image has been boosted in contrast to enhance the visibility. Doing so also brought out the blue tint to the Gegenschein. The Pleiades and Hyades clusters in Taurus are at left. The stars of Aries are just above the glow. The blue fuzzy spot at upper centre is the galaxy M33. This is a stack of 8 x 4 minute exposures with the Canon RF 15-35mm lens at 24mm and f/4 to minimize lens vignetting, and on the Canon R6 at ISO 800 on the Star Adventurer Mini tracker. Taken with the field nearly due south. Bands of reddish airglow and some light cloud discoloured the sky but were partly averaged out by the stacking and with gradient adjustments. Taken from home in southern Alberta on Halloween night!
The Zodiacal Light at Dawn (Fish-Eye)
The Zodiacal Light in the dawn sky, September 14, 2021, from home in Alberta, with the winter sky rising. The Big Dipper is at far left. Orion and the winter stars are at right, with the Milky Way rising vertically across the frame. The Zodiacal Light is the pyramid-shaped glow angled to the right rising out of the eastern sky. Dawn twilight colours the sky. This is a stack of 4 x 30-second exposures for the ground to smooth noise, and a single 30-second exposure for the sky, all with the TTArtisan 8mm fish-eye lens at f/2 and on the Canon R6 at ISO 1600.
The Zodiacal Light in the September Dawn v2
The Zodiacal Light in the dawn sky, September 14, 2021, from home in Alberta, with the winter sky rising. Orion and the winter stars are at right with Sirius rising. The winter Milky Way appears vertically across the frame. The Pleiades andf Capella are at top. The Zodiacal Light is the pyramid-shaped glow angled to the right rising out of the eastern sky. Dawn twilight colours the sky. This is a stack of 4 x 30-second exposures for the ground to smooth noise, and a single 30-second exposure for the sky, all with the TTArtisan 11mm full-frame fish-eye lens at f/2.8 and on the Canon R6 at ISO 3200. All untracked on a static tripod.
The Zodiacal Light in the September Dawn v1
The Zodiacal Light in the dawn sky, September 14, 2021, from home in Alberta, with the winter sky rising. Orion and the winter stars are at far right with Sirius rising. The Big Dipper is at far left. The winter Milky Way appears vertically across the frame. The Zodiacal Light is the pyramid-shaped glow angled to the right rising out of the eastern sky. Dawn twilight colours the sky. This is a stack of 5 x 30-second exposures for the ground to smooth noise, and a single 30-second exposure for the sky, all with the TTArtisan 11mm full-frame fish-eye lens at f/2.8 and on the Canon R6 at ISO 3200. All untracked on a static tripod.
Flaring Geosats with Labels (March 9, 2021)
A capture of a line of geosats (geostationary communication satellites) as they flare in brightness during one of their semi-annual "flare" seasons near the equinoxes. They are reflecting sunlight back to Earth, flaring from their normal dim telescopic brightness to briefly become bright enough to see with the unaided eye. They are brightest around the point directly opposite the Sun, here marked by the dim glow of the Gegenschein, another reflection of sunlight but off dust particles in the outer solar system beyond Earth's orbit. In this case, a number of the satellites are flaring to the brightness of Regulus, at first magnitude. While it looks like the satellites are moving, they are actually stationary with respect to the Earth (thus their name) and it is the sky that is moving. But the camera was tracking the sky, keeping the stars pinpoints, making the satellites stand out better as trails due to their motion with respect to the background stars during the 2.5 minutes of accumulated exposure time. This is a stack of 5 x 30-second tracked exposures, with a 24mm Sigma lens at f/2.2 and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200, with the camera on the Star Adventurer 2i tracker.
Flaring Geosats (March 9, 2021)
A capture of a line of geosats (geostationary communication satellites) as they flare in brightness during one of their semi-annual "flare" seasons near the equinoxes. They are reflecting sunlight back to Earth, flaring from their normal dim telescopic brightness to briefly become bright enough to see with the unaided eye. They are brightest around the point directly opposite the Sun, here marked by the dim glow of the Gegenschein, another reflection of sunlight but off dust particles in the outer solar system beyond Earth's orbit. In this case, a number of the satellites are flaring to the brightness of Regulus, at first magnitude. While it looks like the satellites are moving, they are actually stationary with respect to the Earth (thus their name) and it is the sky that is moving. But the camera was tracking the sky, keeping the stars pinpoints, making the satellites stand out better as trails due to their motion with respect to the background stars during the 2.5 minutes of accumulated exposure time. This is a stack of 5 x 30-second tracked exposures, with a 24mm Sigma lens at f/2.2 and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200, with the camera on the Star Adventurer 2i tracker.
Winter Sky Panorama — 360° Rectangular
A 360° panorama of the entire late winter/early spring sky from northern latitudes, with the winter Milky Way stretching across the sky, from south (at left) to north (at right). West is at centre. Orion and the northern winters stars are left of centre to the southwest. Just below the prominent Pleiades cluster at centre is Mars, then near the Pleiades in early March 2021. To the far left in the eastern sky the spring stars are rising. The Beehive star cluster stands out to the left of the Milky Way,. The Big Dipper is at upper right. Arcturus is rising at far right just above the horizon. Sirius is above the southern horizon left of centre. The faint glow of Gegenschein is at far left below Leo, opposite the Sun. I shot this from home on March 7, 2021 on a very clear night with no aurora to the north. This is from a latitude of 51° N. This is a stitch of 21 segments, in 3 tiers or rows of 7 segments each, with the Sigma 24mm Art lens at f/2 and Canon EOS Ra camera at ISO 1600. Exposures were 30 seconds each, all untracked. The camera was moved automatically from frame to frame by placing it on the Sky-Watcher AZ-GTi motorized alt-azimuth mount, programmed with the hand controller from the old Sky-Watcher All-View mount. Stitching was with PTGui using equirectangular projection. The original is 28,000 by 8,000 pixels.
Flaring Geosats with Labels (March 7, 2021)
A capture of a line of geosats (geostationary communication satellites) as they flare in brightness during one of their semi-annual "flare" seasons near the equinoxes. They are reflecting sunlight back to Earth, flaring from their normal dim telescopic brightness to briefly become bright enough to see with the unaided eye. They are brightest around the point directly opposite the Sun, here marked by the dim glow of the Gegenschein, another reflection of sunlight but off dust particles in the outer solar system beyond Earth's orbit. While it looks like the satellites are moving, they are actually stationary with respect to the Earth (thus their name) and it is the sky that is moving. But the camera was tracking the sky, keeping the stars pinpoints, making the satellites stand out better as trails due to their motion with respect to the background stars during the 3.5 minutes of accumulated exposure time. This is a stack of 7 x 30-second tracked exposures, with a 20mm Sigma lens at f/2.8 and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200, with the camera on the Star Adventurer 2i tracker.
Flaring Geosats (March 7, 2021)
A capture of a line of geosats (geostationary communication satellites) as they flare in brightness during one of their semi-annual "flare" seasons near the equinoxes. They are reflecting sunlight back to Earth, flaring from their normal dim telescopic brightness to briefly become bright enough to see with the unaided eye. They are brightest around the point directly opposite the Sun, here marked by the dim glow of the Gegenschein, another reflection of sunlight but off dust particles in the outer solar system beyond Earth's orbit. While it looks like the satellites are moving, they are actually stationary with respect to the Earth (thus their name) and it is the sky that is moving. But the camera was tracking the sky, keeping the stars pinpoints, making the satellites stand out better as trails due to their motion with respect to the background stars during the 3.5 minutes of accumulated exposure time. This is a stack of 7 x 30-second tracked exposures, with a 20mm Sigma lens at f/2.8 and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200, with the camera on the Star Adventurer 2i tracker.
Zodiacal Light with Venus and Mars
The Zodiacal Light before dawn on September 21, 2020 with Venus bright in the Zodiacal Light at left of centre, and Mars bright at far right. Orion and the winter stars are at centre. The Big Dipper is at far left/ This is a panorama of 6 segments, each untracked for 25 seconds at f/2 with the 14mm Sigma Art lens on the Nikon D750 at ISO 1600, and stitched with Adobe Camera Raw.
The Winter Stars and Zodiacal Light at Dinosaur Park
Orion and the winter stars setting on a spring evening at Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, with the Zodiacal Light rising out the urban sky glow from distant Calgary. Sirius is at far left, with Orion setting behind the badlands hill, while the Pleiades is in the Zodiacal Light band at right, with Mars just below the Pleiades. High haze and aircraft contrails add the natural star glows. The ugly yellow glow of light pollution contrasts with the delicate natural glows of the Zodiacal Light and Milky Way. This is a panorama stitched from 3 segments, all with the 24mm Sigma Art lens and Nikon D750, for 20 seconds at f/2.2 and ISO 4000. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw.
Winter Sky Setting at Dinosaur Park Panorama
A wide panorama of Orion and the winter stars setting on a spring evening at Dinosaur Provincial Park, with the Zodiacal Light rising out of the twilight and distant yellow sky glow to the west at centre. Sirius is at left to the southwest, with Orion setting behind the badlands hill, while the Pleiades is in the Zodiacal Light band at centre, with Mars just below the Pleiades. Perseus, Cassiopeia, and the Andromeda Galaxy are setting at right in the northwest. High haze and aircraft contrails (one at centre) add the natural star glows. The lingering twilight adds the sky colour. This is a 240° panorama stitched from 17 segments, all with the 24mm Sigma Art lens and Nikon D750 in portrait orientation, each segment 20 seconds at f/1.4 and ISO 3200. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw. A mild Orton glow effect was added to the landscape with Luminar 3 plugin.
The ISS, Airglow, and Zodiacal Light
A pass of the International Space Station with Canadian astronaut David St. Jacques on board, on the evening of January 26, 2019. I started the sequence just before 7 pm MST. The ISS is moving from right to left, southwest to southeast. The ISS faded and reddened naturally into sunset at top left in Taurus. Just before it did that it passed through the Hyades star cluster and just missed Aldebaran. Interestingly, the ISS seemed to track along the ecliptic here, made somewhat visible by the faint arc of the Zodiacal Light reaching up from the horizon at right and stretching across the sky to the upper left. The ISS coincidentally travelled parallel to, but just below the Zodiacal Light, which follows the ecliptic. Some red streaks of airglow are also visible, and I emphasized those in the colour correction to make a more colourful sky. I did the opposite to the light polluted clouds! But their yellow remains. Pity. I shot this from home, with the oft-photographed old farm rake as a foreground element. This is a stack of 8 x 30 second exposures, but with the ISS trails masked and blended with Lighten mode onto a single 30-second exposure taken just before the first ISS image. This yields a background sky with minimum star trailing. However, the ISS is trailed over the 4 minutes it traversed the sky from southwest (right) to southeast (left). All were with the 15mm Canon full-frame fish-eye lens at f/2.8 and Canon 6D MkII at ISO 3200. I added small cloned ISS trail bits to fill the gaps between the exposures caused by the 1-second interval, to make a continuous trail, despite it being from 8 exposures.
The watery constellations of Aquarius (occupying the majority of the frame) and Piscis Austrinus, at bottom right, marked by the bright star Fomalhaut. Part of Capricornus is at far right. The southern circlet of Pisces is at upper left, so the frame contains bits of many of the watery constellations of the southern sky. The Y-shaped “Steering Wheel” asterism in Aquarius is at top of the frame. The Zodiacal Light brightens the sky across the top along the ecliptic, as these constellations were in the southwest evening sky setting when I took this shot. This is a stack of 2 x 2-minute exposures with the 35mm Canon lens at f/2.5 and Canon 5D Mark II at ISO 1600. Taken from Quailway Cottage in southeast Arizona.
Sky Dust - Interplanetary and Interstellar
Depictions of two kinds of dust in space: At left the pyramid-shaped glow of Zodiacal Light caused by sunlight reflecting off interplanetary dust in the inner solar system from comets and meteoroids, while at right is the band of the bright Milky Way, made of stars in our galaxy. But along it lie dark lanes of interstellar dust made of carbon compounds made in the atmospheres of stars and dispersed into the Galaxy. This is from the Quailway Cottage near Portal, Arizona, on December 14, 2017, looking west to the Chiricahua Mountains of southeast Arizona. The Summer Triangle stars are setting into the west with Deneb at top, while Vega is at right. Altair is lowest at centre. The sky is a single 30-second exposure, while the ground is a mean combined stack of 8 30-second exposures to smooth noise, all at f/2.5 with the 14mm lens and Canon 6D MkII at ISO 6400. Not tracked — these were part of a 350-frame time-lapse.
Zodiacal Light over the Tetons at Dawn
The morning Zodiacal Light over the hills and peaks of the Grand Tetons in Wyoming, at dawn on August 20, 2017, the day before the solar eclipse. Venus is the bright object below, the Pleiades is at top, Orion at right amid cloud. This was taken from the Idaho side. Lights on the Tetons are likely from climbers on the peaks, there to watch the eclipse the next day. This is with the Canon 6D and Rokinon 14mm lens. It is a single exposure of 25 seconds at f/2.5 and ISO 6400.
Zodiacal Light over the Tetons at Dawn
The morning Zodiacal Light over the hills and peaks of the Grand Tetons in Wyoming, at dawn on August 20, 2017, the day before the solar eclipse. Venus is the bright object below, the Pleiades is at top, Orion at right amid cloud. This was taken from the Idaho side. Lights on the Tetons are likely from climbers on the peaks, there to watch the eclipse the next day. This is with the Canon 6D and Rokinon 14mm lens. It is a single exposure of 25 seconds at f/2.5 and ISO 6400.
Milky Way Rising #2 - With Dark Emu
The southern Milky Way and galactic centre rising on an April night in Australia, with the Dark Emu rising and now cleared the trees with hsi head, neck and body visible. Scorpius has risen. The faint glow at left is the Zodiacal Band. While it looks like the Milky Way is casting light across the ground, the bright ground is from lights from a nearby house on briefly for a few seconds. This is a stack of 8 x 45-second exposures for the ground, mean combined to smooth noise, and one 45-second untracked exposure for the sky, all with the Rokinon 14m lens at f/2.5 and Canon 6D at ISO 3200. Taken as part of a 500-frame time-lapse sequence.
Panorama of the Winter Sky in March-B&W Naked Eye View
A horizon-to-zenith panorama of the winter consellations on a March evening as they set into the southwest. Orion is at bottom centre, with his Belt pointing down to Canis Major and up to Taurus. Gemini and Auriga are at top, in this case near the zenith overhead. The bright star clusters, M44, the Beehive, (at left) and M45, the Pleiades, (at right) flank the Milky Way. M45 is embedded in the Zodiacal Light. The star clusters M35 in Gemini and M41 in Canis Major are also visible as diffuse spots, as are several other star clusters. A couple of satellite trails are visible. Taken from home Match 19, 2017, for use as a book illustration. This is a panorama of 5 panels, each with the 20mm Sigma Art lens at f/2, and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200, for 25 seconds each. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw.
Panorama of the Winter Sky in March (with Labels)
A horizon-to-zenith panorama of the winter consellations on a March evening as they set into the southwest. Orion is at bottom centre, with his Belt pointing down to Canis Major and up to Taurus. Gemini and Auriga are at top, in this case near the zenith overhead. The bright star clusters, M44, the Beehive, (at left) and M45, the Pleiades, (at right) flank the Milky Way. M45 is embedded in the Zodiacal Light. The star clusters M35 in Gemini and M41 in Canis Major are also visible as diffuse spots, as are several other star clusters. A couple of satellite trails are visible. Taken from home Match 19, 2017, for use as a book illustration. This is a panorama of 5 panels, each with the 20mm Sigma Art lens at f/2, and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200, for 25 seconds each. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw.