Reprocessed with a focus on the prominences. Happy with the result here although I want to redo it again to see if I can get better detail on the corona. 🔭🧪
Five days out from #Eclipse2024, I'm working through the experience and processing it both psychologically and digitally.
These images from around totality, are still frames extracted from white-light HD video made near Kerrville, Texas. Far from ruining the experience, the clouds overhead at our site added a haunting, ethereal quality to the result.
@JohnBarentine We were in Comfort and I have to say, I found the clouds really took away from the extraordinary experience I was expecting (based on what we saw in 2017). I missed perceiving the moon as a void and seeing the corona as a fluid! There were definitely other things to appreciate and we don't regret the trip. These are beautiful pictures.
I was running a Coronado PST on a tracking mount and taking images with my phone. This sequence just before and at second contact shows features in the solar chromosphere disappearing as the eclipse becomes total. Time increases from top to bottom.
The second image is essentially the same sequence in white light taken through a 100-mm refractor at the same time.
Four days later, what word below best describes the online conversational health of #eclipse2024#solareclipse#eclispe in a post-Twitter social architecture?
Another from the eclipse on Monday. Taken at Rangeley Lake, in Maine, during the totality for the main image. The other instances of the eclipse were composited in, in the position they were in at the time the image was taken. Each instance of the eclipse if 15 minutes after the previous instance. Prints available.
I've finally started to sort out the eclipse photos from my big camera. This came just a few seconds after my diamond ring photo, so let's call this a ruby ring.
I'm not completely sure what's going on here to create the red color. I think the red is from the Sun's chromosphere. Then maybe the red is being refracted then scattered a bit by the high cloud cover we had during totality. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
My view of the 3.5 minute totality in Sherbrooke Quebec, April 8, 2024. The surprise for me and clearly 100's of astonished people around me, was the huge difference between 99% and totality. At 99% the sun is still incredibly bright and you cannot look at with the naked eye. Then in an instant it sort of flashes and goes black and you can look directly at the eclipse without a filter. It was actually much darker on the ground than the camera made it look in this photo. #eclipse#eclipse2024
Its OK to be scientifically ignorant. But it's not OK to be scientifically ignorant, and stand before a crowd of students and make #unscientific assertions as if they were fact. And it's not OK to respond to people who point out the absurdity of your unscientific remarks with deflections and insults. You said something dumb. Just acknowledge it, correct it, and move on.