Approve the Cookies
This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and our Privacy Policy.
OK
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Guest
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Register to forums    Log in

 
FORUMS Photo Sharing & Discussion Astronomy & Celestial 
Thread started 09 Jul 2011 (Saturday) 03:27
Search threadPrev/next
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

ISS flies past Jupiter

 
SteveInNZ
Goldmember
1,426 posts
Likes: 89
Joined Nov 2007
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
     
Jul 09, 2011 03:27 |  #1

Went for a bit of a drive this morning to get this. The weather here is awful this weekend but it cleared up for a brief moment.
It took about 2 seconds to pass through the field of view (prime focus 950mm, 40D)

IMAGE: http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6009/5918069448_885f67a60b_b.jpg
IMAGE LINK: http://www.flickr.com/​photos/stevetla/591806​9448/  (external link)
Jupiter_ISS_flyby (external link) by stevetla (external link), on Flickr

Steve.

"Treat every photon with respect" - David Malin.

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
cyberon
Senior Member
Avatar
540 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Jan 2010
Location: Perth, Australia
     
Jul 09, 2011 03:38 |  #2

Impressive!


500D, Speedlite 430EX II, Lens : 15-85mm; 50mm F1.8 II; 100mm F2.8L IS Macro; 70-200mm F4L; Samyang 8mm F3.5
U/W : G11, OEM Housing, Inon S2000, Inon D4 Tray, Inon UCL-165 Close up lens
Astro : Modded 1100D, ES 80ED, Skywatcher HEQ5 Mount, Astrotrac TT320X-AG, Astronomik CLS Clip in filter

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
martyn_bannister
Senior Member
568 posts
Joined Jul 2010
     
Jul 09, 2011 04:59 |  #3

Spectacular job. To get both in shot at once is indeed an impressive achievement, well done! Was that an aircraft making the dots right across the frame?

EDIT: Sorry! I have just twigged! The dots are the individual frames of the ISS and this is a stacked shot, is that right? DOH!




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
spit
Senior Member
Avatar
311 posts
Joined Sep 2009
Location: Alpha Cygnus II- Delta Quadrant
     
Jul 09, 2011 08:08 |  #4

excellant!!




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
the ­ jimmy
Goldmember
Avatar
1,426 posts
Likes: 33
Joined Dec 2009
Location: west coast of Florida
     
Jul 09, 2011 08:50 as a reply to  @ spit's post |  #5

Supurb...[marked to the highest degree by grandeur, excellence, brilliance, or competence]




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
SteveInNZ
THREAD ­ STARTER
Goldmember
1,426 posts
Likes: 89
Joined Nov 2007
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
     
Jul 09, 2011 16:35 |  #6

Thanks folks.
Martyn, Thanks for your comments. I really wasn't sure how to present it so your feedback is very helpful. I'll try something else next time.
Yes. The body of the shot is the stacked sequence, aligned on Jupiter. The two insets are the Registax stacks of the individual items.
I wanted to follow it up with a shot that included the moons but the clouds beat me to it. Next time.


"Treat every photon with respect" - David Malin.

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
megrac
Senior Member
635 posts
Joined Oct 2009
Location: Whangarei, New Zealand
     
Jul 09, 2011 18:38 |  #7

Thats great Steve well done.


60D | Canon 15-85 | Canon 200mm f/2.8L II | Canon 400mm f/5.6L | 580EX II. And a heap of Astrophotography gear.

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
Footbag
Senior Member
391 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Jan 2010
Location: Scranton, PA
     
Jul 09, 2011 19:22 |  #8

Very nice image!


Adam
My Astrophoto Gallery (external link)
The Astro Imaging Channel (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
Anke
"that rump shot is just adorable"
UK SE Photographer of the Year 2009
Avatar
30,454 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Oct 2006
Location: Royal Tunbridge Wells, UK
     
Jul 09, 2011 19:23 |  #9

Really cool.


Anke
1D Mark IV | 16-35L f/2.8 II | 24-70L f/2.8 II | 70-200L f/2.8 II | 50 f/1.4 | 600EX-RT and ST-E3-RT
Join the Official POTN UK South-East Thread | Follow me on Twitter (external link) | Tunbridge Wells (external link) | Flickr (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
PaulD71
Member
Avatar
121 posts
Likes: 1
Joined Aug 2010
Location: Converse, TX
     
Jul 09, 2011 21:50 |  #10

Wow, that's great!


Body: Canon XSi
Lenses: EF-S 18-55 IS, EF-S 55-250 IS

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
E ­ James ­ P
Goldmember
Avatar
1,144 posts
Likes: 1
Joined Dec 2005
Location: Wichita,Ks
     
Jul 10, 2011 00:36 |  #11

great shot


Gearflickr (external link)
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I’m not sure about the former."
- Albert Einstein (1879-1955) . "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." George Santayana

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
naddieuk
Senior Member
Avatar
460 posts
Gallery: 4 photos
Likes: 75
Joined Apr 2010
Location: Wales
     
Jul 10, 2011 03:13 |  #12

That is pretty amazing.


Canon Powershot S95, Canon EOS 1000D attached to Skywatcher Explorer 150P on an EQ-3 unguided mount.
My Flickr site. (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
britain
Senior Member
Avatar
917 posts
Gallery: 280 photos
Likes: 2015
Joined Jun 2005
Location: El Centro Calif
     
Jul 10, 2011 22:22 as a reply to  @ naddieuk's post |  #13

Just wow!


7D2, 20D , 100-400L I, 100-400L II, EFS 17-85 , EFS 18-135, EFS 10-18mm, 100 2.8 macro , ring light, 430EX II, PD Capture Pro, Lifted modified Jeep to shake it all up:)

My Website HERE (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
coinnut
Member
170 posts
Joined May 2011
Location: New York, USA
     
Jul 11, 2011 10:20 |  #14

Incredable!


"Those who stand for nothing,will fall for anything"
All for Macro! Canon T2i / EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro USM / EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS / EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS / Remote Switch RS-60E3 / Manfrotto 055XPROB Alum. Legs w/498RC2 Midi Ball Head

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
archer1960
Goldmember
Avatar
4,932 posts
Gallery: 6 photos
Likes: 82
Joined Jul 2010
     
Jul 11, 2011 10:51 |  #15

Wow! Great work!


Gripped 7D, gripped, full-spectrum modfied T1i (500D), SX50HS, A2E film body, Tamzooka (150-600), Tamron 90mm/2.8 VC (ver 2), Tamron 18-270 VC, Canon FD 100 f/4.0 macro, Canon 24-105 f/4L,Canon EF 200 f/2.8LII, Canon 85 f/1.8, Tamron Adaptall 2 90mmf/2.5 Macro, Tokina 11-16, Canon EX-430 flash, Vivitar DF-383 flash, Astro-Tech AT6RC and Celestron NexStar 102 GT telescopes, various other semi-crappy manual lenses and stuff.

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

2,461 views & 0 likes for this thread, 18 members have posted to it.
ISS flies past Jupiter
FORUMS Photo Sharing & Discussion Astronomy & Celestial 
AAA
x 1600
y 1600

Jump to forum...   •  Rules   •  Forums   •  New posts   •  RTAT   •  'Best of'   •  Gallery   •  Gear   •  Reviews   •  Member list   •  Polls   •  Image rules   •  Search   •  Password reset   •  Home

Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!


COOKIES DISCLAIMER: This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and to our privacy policy.
Privacy policy and cookie usage info.


POWERED BY AMASS forum software 2.58forum software
version 2.58 /
code and design
by Pekka Saarinen ©
for photography-on-the.net

Latest registered member is Niagara Wedding Photographer
1563 guests, 140 members online
Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018

Photography-on-the.net Digital Photography Forums is the website for photographers and all who love great photos, camera and post processing techniques, gear talk, discussion and sharing. Professionals, hobbyists, newbies and those who don't even own a camera -- all are welcome regardless of skill, favourite brand, gear, gender or age. Registering and usage is free.