by kbmcdowell » Mon Feb 12, 2007 5:41 pm
I am having a problem with the McNaught image from New Zealand (
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070212.html). As an amatuer astronomer, and a better photographer, I can not resolve how this image was taken. The ground and background lights appear to be the result of camera shake. More than that, the angles of the obvious ground lights on the right appear to be a mirror to the angles on the left. I would expect with camera shake, that all ground lights would follow the same track.
More importantly, the star fields, comet and other celestial objects in this photo are perfectly imaged. Why would such a perfect looking astrophotograph have such imperfect ground focus and obvious camera shake? Any camera shake at all would effect the lights in the sky as well, wouldn't it? Especially the comet, the brightest object in the sky. But it is razor sharp...
kbmcdowell
I am having a problem with the McNaught image from New Zealand ([url=http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070212.html]http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070212.html[/url]). As an amatuer astronomer, and a better photographer, I can not resolve how this image was taken. The ground and background lights appear to be the result of camera shake. More than that, the angles of the obvious ground lights on the right appear to be a mirror to the angles on the left. I would expect with camera shake, that all ground lights would follow the same track.
More importantly, the star fields, comet and other celestial objects in this photo are perfectly imaged. Why would such a perfect looking astrophotograph have such imperfect ground focus and obvious camera shake? Any camera shake at all would effect the lights in the sky as well, wouldn't it? Especially the comet, the brightest object in the sky. But it is razor sharp...
kbmcdowell