Photo from yesterday.
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Photo from yesterday. Pictures from Monday's little Ragnarök rehearsal will take a while, though. Many of those are complex panoramas, some wider than 180°. Takes time that is currently demanded elsewhere.
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Photo from yesterday. Pictures from Monday's little Ragnarök rehearsal will take a while, though. Many of those are complex panoramas, some wider than 180°. Takes time that is currently demanded elsewhere.
Panoramas from last week's unreal #aurora event are finally done and will be posted here every #FotoMontag.
Starting with the tame ones, before the show really took off.
edit: wording. -
Panoramas from last week's unreal #aurora event are finally done and will be posted here every #FotoMontag.
Starting with the tame ones, before the show really took off.
edit: wording.Next bunch of Jan19 #aurora pictures for #FotoMontag: I would have gone home a happy bunny just getting images like the first one. The shock front of CMEs rarely causes the most visually stunning parts of a storm (especially down here in Central Europe). But then the sky cracked like an egg and became a silent concert of color and movement.
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Next bunch of Jan19 #aurora pictures for #FotoMontag: I would have gone home a happy bunny just getting images like the first one. The shock front of CMEs rarely causes the most visually stunning parts of a storm (especially down here in Central Europe). But then the sky cracked like an egg and became a silent concert of color and movement.
Next part of #aurora photos. Never thought I'd get to witness such a spectacle here. When the IPA (isolated proton aurora) visible in image 2 & 4 took off.... Wow. Words can't describe it. Images are in chronological order, panoramas of 8-12 images shot within 3-8 minutes beginning 21:30 UTC.
If you want to see a video of it: Someone near Stuttgart filmed that bright green burst visible in my last pic in *real time*: https://youtu.be/e19kAuC-6eU -
Next part of #aurora photos. Never thought I'd get to witness such a spectacle here. When the IPA (isolated proton aurora) visible in image 2 & 4 took off.... Wow. Words can't describe it. Images are in chronological order, panoramas of 8-12 images shot within 3-8 minutes beginning 21:30 UTC.
If you want to see a video of it: Someone near Stuttgart filmed that bright green burst visible in my last pic in *real time*: https://youtu.be/e19kAuC-6eULast Jan19th post. "Swan song". Things calmed down quicklly after 22:00 UTC. The aurora oval retreated northwards, with only a dull glow remaining. Stark Difference even after a barely 15 minute drive to a second photo location (image 2). Image 3 shows a faint SAR bow visible around 4:00 UTC next morning.
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Last Jan19th post. "Swan song". Things calmed down quicklly after 22:00 UTC. The aurora oval retreated northwards, with only a dull glow remaining. Stark Difference even after a barely 15 minute drive to a second photo location (image 2). Image 3 shows a faint SAR bow visible around 4:00 UTC next morning.
I'm currently working on a blog post about the event and the editing of aurora photos. It will be proof-read by a friendly neighbourhood astrophysicist so hopefully even professionals will be able to stomach the text without developing anger issues. If anyone's interested in it, give me a shout.
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