by JohnChumack » Fri May 02, 2014 1:53 am
The Aurora image has not been Altered to make it look like a dog, it has been color balanced only to get the natural color temperature of the stars, and Labelled to ID the stars & Planets. I saw this with my eye and had several cameras shooting at different parts of the Aurora, it changes rapidly..literally every 20 seconds or so..
For this shot I used an 8mm Fish-eye Lens with a Modified (Baader) Canon Rebel Xsi DSLR, ISO 1600, F3.5,for a 15 second exposure.
The Combination of this lens and modified Camera makes them super sensitive to starlight, hence why it is geared towards Astrophotography!
The 8 Spikes on the stars are often from Leaf Shutter stops or you can also employ a Star Cross filter.... I imagine it could be done post processing as well.
you can see the diffraction spikes on a normal lens if you stop down the F-stop to F6 or F8.
If fact with my 8mm Fish-eye lens Daylight is way too much light with this combo...
I literally have to stop way down to F32 and take super short 1/2000 to 1/4000 sec exposures at low ISO, but Most Experience Astrophotographers who own Fisheye lenses are aware of this!
Best Regards,
John Chumack
http://www.galacticimages.com
The Aurora image has not been Altered to make it look like a dog, it has been color balanced only to get the natural color temperature of the stars, and Labelled to ID the stars & Planets. I saw this with my eye and had several cameras shooting at different parts of the Aurora, it changes rapidly..literally every 20 seconds or so..
For this shot I used an 8mm Fish-eye Lens with a Modified (Baader) Canon Rebel Xsi DSLR, ISO 1600, F3.5,for a 15 second exposure.
The Combination of this lens and modified Camera makes them super sensitive to starlight, hence why it is geared towards Astrophotography!
The 8 Spikes on the stars are often from Leaf Shutter stops or you can also employ a Star Cross filter.... I imagine it could be done post processing as well.
you can see the diffraction spikes on a normal lens if you stop down the F-stop to F6 or F8.
If fact with my 8mm Fish-eye lens Daylight is way too much light with this combo...
I literally have to stop way down to F32 and take super short 1/2000 to 1/4000 sec exposures at low ISO, but Most Experience Astrophotographers who own Fisheye lenses are aware of this!
Best Regards,
John Chumack
http://www.galacticimages.com